Apple TV Greenlights Season 3 for Your Friends and Neighbors
Apple TV is betting big on the star-studded dark comedy Your Friends and Neighbors, renewing it for Season 3 ahead of the long-awaited Season 2 premiere on April 3, 2026. Plot details for Season 3 remain under wraps.
Apple TV+ just renewed its dark comedy 'Your Friends and Neighbors' for Season 3 before Season 2 has even arrived. Early renewals like this usually mean the streamer likes what it sees and wants to keep the machine humming.
Season 3 is happening before Season 2 even lands
Season 2 premieres April 3, 2026. Season 3 has no plot details or release window yet, but Jon Hamm is back as lead and executive producer. He plays Andrew Cooper, a New York hedge fund guy who loses his job and starts stealing from his wealthy neighbors to keep his family living large. Not exactly a moral compass, but it makes for good TV.
What Season 2 is dealing with
'In Season 2, Andrew Cooper doubles down on his life as an unlikely suburban thief, until the arrival of a new neighbor threatens to expose his secrets and place his family at risk.'
Translation: Andrew leans harder into the break-ins, and then someone new moves in who could blow up his cover and drag his family into the mess.
Cast and crew lineup
- Jon Hamm ('Mad Men') returns as Andrew Cooper and executive producer
- Created by Jonathan Tropper ('Banshee', 'See'), who also serves as showrunner and executive producer
- Season 2 cast: Amanda Peet, Olivia Munn, Hoon Lee, Mark Tallman, Lena Hall, Aimee Carrero, Eunice Bae, Isabel Gravitt, Donovan Colan
- James Marsden ('X-Men') joins Season 2 as a series regular
- Executive producers also include Connie Tavel, Craig Gillespie, Jamie Rosengard, Lori Keith Douglas, and Stephanie Laing
How Season 1 landed
The first season is Certified Fresh at 79% on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 61 reviews. Not a runaway smash, but solid enough to justify the confidence.
What to watch for
No Season 3 timeline yet. With Season 2 locked for April 3, 2026, the early pickup should keep production momentum going — which is probably the point.