Western Animation Television Series have plenty of Magical Girl Warriors.
- Craig of the Creek has Sparkle Cadet. She certainly acts and dresses the part.
- Gender-Inverted in The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy: In Underfist, Irwin gains dark mumpire powers, with his appearance and the overall execution of the concept being a lot like a Magical Boy combined with your typical superhero. He uses these powers to save Halloween in the special. Had a Spin-Off been made, the trope would have probably been played a bit straighter.
- LoliRock is a combination of this and Magic Idol Singer.
- Magical Girl Friendship Squad is an adult parody of the genre.
- Miraculous Ladybug is either a Magical Girl show that emphasizes the superhero aspects or a superhero show that follows a lot of Magical Girl Tropes (Transformation Trinket, Transformation Sequence, Mentor Mascot, etc.) The title character also teams up with a magical boy, Chat Noir; the two are actually involved in a Two-Person Love Square, as they also know each other in their civilian identities.
- We're later introduced to other Miraculous holders, including girls like Volpina (who is actually the Monster of the Week, Lila, and doesn't actually have the Fox Miraculous), Rena Rouge (Alya with the Fox Miraculous), Queen Bee (Chloe with the Bee Miraculous), and Bunnyx (Alix with the Rabbit Miraculous). On the boys' side, there's Carapace (Nino with the Turtle Miraculous), Pegasus (Max with the Horse Miraculous), Viperion (Luka with the Snake Miraculous), and King Monkey (Lê Chiến Kim with the Monkey Miraculous).
- The superhero/magical girl style common to Miraculous wielders notably only seems to be localized to France, as the heroes from America are more traditional Capes.
- My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic slips into Magical Filly Warrior Ponies territory when fighting the major villains, but otherwise is strictly Slice of Life with magical talking ponies. The Equestria Girls movies play the trope a bit straighter, while the girls transform into magical heroes near the climax of each movie in order to deal with the movie's Big Bad.
- Mysticons is about a group of teenage girls who transform into legendary magic-powered warriors.
- Nella the Princess Knight is a Nick Jr. show about a girl who is already a princess but gets a magical pendant after she rescues a unicorn that lets her transform into a magical knight to do good deeds. "Warrior" might be a bit strong for a show aimed at the much younger set but she has the potential at least, though she more focuses on rescuing people and reforming bad creatures.
- Princess Gwenevere and the Jewel Riders
- She-Ra: Princess of Power is an early one. Its Continuity Reboot She-Ra and the Princesses of Power goes further by making She-Ra an Older Alter Ego for Adora and making the Super Team aspect more apparent.
- Adora's brother Adam/He-Man is a mix between a magical boy and a Sci-fi barbarian version of a Magic Knight. a quip that "He-Man is a Magical Girl!" became memetic.
- Star vs. the Forces of Evil
- The titular Star Butterfly, a Girly Bruiser princess from the magical kingdom of Mewni who is exiled to Earth until she gets a better handle on the powers granted by the magic wand she was gifted on her fourteenth birthday. Throughout the series, we also learn that some of her predecessors were also these, including her own mother, the current Queen Moon, and the disowned Queen Eclipsa.
- We're also introduced to Mina Loveberry (who's a very obvious Sailor Senshi Send-Up), an evil version of this trope — she wants to commit mass genocide of the monster race because she believes all monsters are evil.
- Steven Universe has the Crystal Gems, a heroic rebel faction who belong to an unaging species of Wizards from Outer Space called Gems and often fight various Homeworld Gems and Gem Monsters to protect humanity. Steven's mother Rose Quartz was the leader of this team before she "gave up her physical form" to bring him into existence. The series' creator has stated that, while they all look like women by our aesthetics, they actually have No Biological Sex, Steven being the exception because he's a Half-Human Hybrid. Steven himself qualifies as a Magical Boy and even goes through gender-flipped versions of typical magical heroine plot points.
- Tenko and the Guardians of the Magic: Tenko and her friends (even though the rest of her teammates are guys).
- The Owl House: Luz Noceda serves as this to Amity's Dark Magical Girl. Luz primarily wears bright clothing, is unfailingly kind and has an ironclad moral compass, with the Light Glyph being her very first spell. That said, Luz is also a deconstructed example. Due to rushing off to the Boiling Isles, Luz never stops to consider how her mother would actually react to her decision to leave, at least at first. Additionally Luz's extreme kindness get exploited by several villains from the Emperor's Coven, most notably Belos himself as he tricks her into helping him meet The Collector and thus set the stage for his planned genocide.
- W.I.T.C.H., which is based off of the comic.
- Winx Club has a couple of Magic Schools for these, one for fairies and another for witches.