| Temenid Dynasty |
| Philip II (son of Amyntas III) |
359 - 336 BC |
| Alexander III (son of Philip II) |
336 - 323 BC |
| Philip III Arrhidaeus (half-brother of Alexander III) |
323 - 317 BC jointly with |
| Alexander IV (posthumous son of Alexander III) |
323 - 309 BC |
 |
| House of Antipater |
| Cassander (son of Antipater) |
316 - 297 BC |
| Philip IV (son of Cassander) |
297 BC (reigned 4 months) |
| Antipater I (son of Cassander) |
297 - 294 BC jointly with |
| Alexander V (son of Cassander) |
297 - 294 BC |
 |
| Antigonid Dynasty |
| Demetrius I Poliorcetes (son of Antigonus Monophthalmus) |
294 - 287 BC |
 |
| Interruption in Antigonid rule |
| Pyrrhus |
287 - 285 and 274 - 273 BC |
| Lysimachus |
287 - 281 BC |
| Ptolemy Ceraunus |
281 - 279 BC |
| Meleager |
279 BC (reigned 2 months) |
| Antipater II |
279 BC (reigned 45 days) |
 |
| Antigonid Dynasty (restored) |
| Antigonus II Gonatas (son of Demetrius Poliorcetes) |
276 - 239 BC |
| Demetrius II (son of Antigonus Gonatas) |
239 - 229 BC |
| Antigonus III Doson (nephew of Antigonus Gonatas) |
229 - 221 BC |
| Philip V (son of Demetrius II) |
221 - 179 BC |
| Perseus (son of Philip V) |
179 - 168 BC |
| Monarchy ended by the defeat of Perseus by the Roman general L. Aemilius Paullus at Pydna and the establishment of four republics. |