Bridgerton season 4 lands release date, renewed for two more seasons
The hit show will return next year
Netflix has confirmed that Bridgerton season four will premiere in 2026, and that the series has been renewed for two further seasons beyond that.
No specific date has yet been announced for the arrival of the fourth season, which will run for eight episodes.
According to Netflix, season four will center on Benedict (Luke Thompson), āthe bohemian second son of the Bridgerton brood.
āUnwilling to settle down like his brothers, his perspective changes when he encounters a captivating Lady in Silver (Yerin Ha) at his motherās masquerade ball.ā
The Lady in Silverās real name has been revealed to be Sophie Baek.
The third season of the period drama set a new record for the streaming service.

In the first four days of its release, Bridgerton season three clocked up 45.05 million views, according to Netflixās own figures ā around double the previous season. This is estimated to equate to around 165.2 million hours of viewing time.
The tally represented the highest weekly view count for any Netflix series since the streamer began publishing viewing rankings in June 2023.
Writing for The Independent, Katie Rosseinsky argued that the popularity of the Regency romance series had totally obliterated the traditional costume drama.
āIn the four years since Bridgerton made its debut, the show has cast an Empire-waisted shadow over anachronistic period productions, leading to projects such as Netflixās adaptation of Persuasion ā featuring Dakota Johnson as a fourth-wall-breaking Austen heroine with a millennial vocabulary ā and Apple TVās version of Edith Whartonās unfinished novel The Buccaneers, which re-styled Whartonās new-money, husband-hunting Americans as a girl gang straight out of a Marc Jacobs perfume ad,ā wrote Rosseinsky.
āIts influence could also be felt, in watered-down form, in ITVās take on Henry Fieldingās Tom Jones, a novel that Bridgertonās more bookish characters would surely be familiar with.

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āNo longer an extravagant, knowingly OTT upstart, Bridgerton is now the model to copy when it comes to telling period stories. But what of the more traditional costume drama? It seems to have all but died out. A decade or so ago, I couldāve reeled off an entire libraryās worth of classics that had recently been turned into a weighty, relatively faithful series by a big terrestrial broadcaster.
āBut to do so now requires serious wracking of brains. Last year, the BBC unveiled a(nother) version of Great Expectations, written by Peaky Blindersā Steven Knight, but it didnāt live up to, well, its title. And it was hardly a straightforward take, either. If Bridgerton turns up the exposure on life in the past to create a dazzlingly bright fantasy, Knightās spin on Dickens did the exact opposite...
āThe postmodern period drama can be plenty of fun. But when the sugar rush wears off, itās hard not to crave something a bit more substantial. Wouldnāt it be nice if there was space for both in the TV schedules?ā
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