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8 Shows Like Severance to Watch Next

Praise Kier

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Allison Picurro
Adam Scott, Severance

Adam Scott, Severance

Apple TV+

Whether you consider yourself a long-suffering Severance fan who waited three years for its second season, or all the hype was enough to get you to check it out in 2025, its absence probably has you feeling a hole in your heart that not even an ORTBO could fix. Severance is the kind of show that's so good that it has the potential to ruin all other TV for you. But if your mind is open and you're looking for something to hold you over while you wait for Season 3, we have some suggestions.

Our list of recommendations for what to watch until we step back inside the Lumon elevator features more sci-fi mysteries, shows about hating your job, and shady corporations that take advantage of their employees.


More recommendations:


Lost

Naveen Andrews and Maggie Grace, Lost

Naveen Andrews and Maggie Grace, Lost

Mario Perez/ABC

The Lost comparisons were inescapable while Season 2 of Severance was airing, but the similarities between the two shows haven't been exaggerated. The 2004-2010 sci-fi drama series is very much the blueprint for Severance's particular brand of mystery box television. It tells the story of the disparate survivors of the doomed Oceanic Flight 815, who find themselves stranded on a mysterious island after their plane crashes. Lost is told through character-centric episodes and flashbacks, and answering one question typically leads to five others being raised — sound familiar? At no point will you know where it's going, but that's all part of the fun. In the interest of giving credit where credit is due, any Severance fan owes it to themselves to check out Lost, if only to see the show that paved the way. -Allison Picurro


Fringe

Fringe

Fringe

FOX Image Collection via Getty Images

It would count as a spoiler (for both shows) to explain exactly why Season 2 of Severance gave Fringe fans flashbacks to the Fox drama's terrific third season. But if you appreciate how Severance uses innies and outies to explore questions of identity, you'll like Fringe, which also complicates its characters' personal lives by giving them doubles. The cult favorite series stars Anna Torv as Olivia Dunham, an agent with the FBI's Fringe Division, who investigates strange cases with the help of scientist Walter Bishop (John Noble, known on Severance as Burt's husband, Fields) and his son, Peter (Joshua Jackson). On the surface, it looks like a straightforward sci-fi procedural, but Fringe evolved into one of the most ambitious broadcast shows of its era, anchored by a thrilling parallel-universe plotline. Like Severance, its intricate mythology is rooted in the emotions of its characters, allowing it to tell complex stories about romance, regret, family drama, and horror. -Kelly Connolly


Counterpart

J.K. Simmons, Counterpart

J.K. Simmons, Counterpart

Starz

Counterpart is a spy drama, yes, but it's a spy drama with a sci-fi twist, which earns it a spot on this list. J.K. Simmons stars as Howard Silk, another low-level cog in the corporate machine at his desk job who is beginning to wind down his career when he discovers that the organization he works for is actually harboring a secret gateway to a parallel universe engaged in a cold war with his own. In that world also exists Howard's counterpart, a ruthless intelligence agent also played by Simmons. The series only ran for two seasons, but it stays consistently, thrillingly suspenseful throughout. -Allison Picurro


Black Mirror

Bryce Dallas Howard, Black Mirror

Bryce Dallas Howard, Black Mirror

David Dettmann/Netflix

Charlie Brooker's anthology about the horrors of technology makes for a solid companion piece to Severance. While the nature of an anthology means that every episode is different, what brings them all together is the speculative and exaggerated way it explores themes from our culture and the relationships we have to those themes, drawing a lot of inspiration from the internet. Some work better than others, but many are in conversation with Severance: One early episode centers around an audiovisual technology implanted in people's brains that records their memories and allows them to rewatch the events of their lives. In another, a woman (Hayley Atwell) brings back an artificially intelligent version of her dead boyfriend (Domhnall Gleeson) with the help of a service that re-constructs personalities of the deceased by combing through their online presences. This show is a great place to start if you're looking for more eerie, dystopian cautionary tales. -Allison Picurro


Corporate

Jake Weisman, Matt Ingebretson, Anne Dudek, and Adam Lustick, Corporate

Jake Weisman, Matt Ingebretson, Anne Dudek, and Adam Lustick, Corporate

Comedy Central

If Severance is the show that best speaks to our current "work sucks" moment, Corporate paved the way for its existence. Few shows get it the way Jake Weisman, Matt Ingebretson, and Pat Bishop's nihilistic satire does, following the day-to-day miseries of two despondent employees (played by Weisman and Ingebretson) at a multinational corporation called Hampton DeVille. Watching the way things escalate gives the show its comically surreal edge: One minute the guys are being scolded for not following email protocol, the next they're considering ratting out the higher-ups for their involvement in a literal war crime — but just so they can take the spots of the fired executives. It's dark and hilarious and, much like Severance, will serve as a reminder you that there's nothing more soul-sucking than when a boss describes an office as a family. -Allison Picurro


Devs

Nick Offerman and Sonoya Mizuno, Devs

Nick Offerman and Sonoya Mizuno, Devs

Raymond Liu/FX

Alex Garland's first TV series is a cerebral sci-fi drama about Lily (Sonoya Mizuno), a software engineer whose boyfriend dies under shady circumstances while working on a secret project at the huge Silicon Valley tech company that employs them. She sets out to uncover the truth and, as these things go, uncovers a bigger conspiracy along the way — one that involves the company's mysterious CEO (Nick Offerman). It has plenty of overlap with Severance in terms of the philosophic questions it raises about technology, and you'll see shades of Mark's (Adam Scott) grief for his wife in Lily as she goes deeper into her investigation. -Allison Picurro


Maniac

Jonah Hill and Emma Stone, Maniac

Jonah Hill and Emma Stone, Maniac

Michele K. Short / Netflix

If you want another show about people volunteering themselves for enigmatic procedures that mess with their brain chemistry, make Maniac your next watch. Emma Stone and Jonah Hill star as two downtrodden strangers who sign up for a pharmaceutical treatment that promises to heal their minds and solve their problems (she's traumatized by her broken relationships with her sister and mother; he's struggling with his schizophrenia diagnosis) over the course of a three-day drug trial. It's dramatic and darkly comic and often extremely WTF-worthy, but it's hard to say much else about Maniac without ruining some of its best surprises. Just know that it's a strange, emotional, and often hopeful limited series that will keep you mesmerized until the very last shot. -Allison Picurro


Homecoming

Janelle Monáe, Homecoming

Janelle Monáe, Homecoming

Amazon Studios

Severance is about a company with a suspicious amount of control over its employees, but Homecoming takes it a step further by focusing on government misdeeds and cover-ups, and the people who end up as casualties along the way. Season 1 stars Julia Roberts as a former social worker who begins questioning her memories of time working at an enigmatic facility that purports to help veterans transition back to civilian life. Season 2 introduces Janelle Monáe as a woman with ties to the same facility but no memory of her identity. Like Severance, Homecoming boasts a stacked cast with a twisty, engaging, and utterly haunting mystery at its center, and a unique, stylized visual identity in its camera techniques and production design. -Allison Picurro