Ted Lasso Season 4 Sets Premiere Window
Apple TV sets the stage for Ted Lasso season 4, locking in a premiere window.
Thought we had said our goodbyes to Ted Lasso with season 3? Same. But surprise: the feel-good soccer show is lacing up for season 4, and there are new faces, and a new team for Ted to coach.
What you need to know right now
- Premiere window: No date yet, but Apple TV+ is aiming for Summer 2026.
- Production status: Season 4 is currently in production in London.
- The pivot: Ted is now coaching a women's soccer team. That is the big swing this year and the clearest sign they are not just running back the same playbook.
- Who's back: Jason Sudeikis (Ted Lasso), Hannah Waddingham (Rebecca Welton), Brett Goldstein (Roy Kent, now assistant coach), Juno Temple (Keeley Jones), Brendan Hunt (Coach Beard), and Jeremy Swift (Leslie Higgins).
- New faces: Seven additions this season - Tanya Reynolds (Sex Education), Jude Mack (Netflix's Back in Action), Faye Marsay (Andor), Rex Hayes, Aisling Sharkey, Abbie Hern (My Lady Jane, Enola Holmes 2), and Grant Feely as Ted's son Henry. Feely replaces Gus Turner, who played Henry in earlier seasons.
- Behind the scenes: Jack Burditt has joined as executive producer under a new overall deal with Apple TV+. Sudeikis also executive produces alongside Brendan Hunt, Joe Kelly, Jane Becker, Jamie Lee, and Bill Wrubel. Brett Goldstein is back as writer and EP with Leanne Bowen. Sarah Walker and Phoebe Walsh are writers and producers for season 4, with Sasha Garron co-producing. Julia Lindon is a writer and Dylan Marron is story editor. Bill Lawrence executive produces via Doozer Productions, working with Warner Bros. Television and Universal Television (a division of NBCUniversal Content). Doozer's Jeff Ingold and Liza Katzer are EPs as well.
- Origin check: The series was developed by Sudeikis, Lawrence, Kelly, and Hunt, based on the preexisting format and characters created for NBC Sports.
So, what's the vibe?
If you figured season 3 wrapped the story, you were not wrong to think that. This new run feels like a deliberate reset: new league, new locker room dynamics, and a clean slate for Ted's particular brand of optimism. The recast of Henry is a practical note worth flagging, and the EP team expanding with Jack Burditt suggests Apple wants a steady hand on the tone as they shift the setting.