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The New Shows of the 2025 Fall TV Season

Vince Gilligan, Jason Bateman, Claire Danes, and Jessica Capshaw return to our TVs this season

Cote De Pablo and Michael Weatherly. NCIS: Tony & Ziva
1 of 57 Marcell Piti/Paramount+

Get ready, because so many new shows are coming!

Throw your calendar in the paper shredder, because you and your TV have a three-month-long date. The 2025 fall television season is upon us and crowded with options, and not just with some of our returning favorites that we can't wait to see

Even with broadcast TV premiering just a handful of new shows, dozens of noteworthy series are debuting this season thanks largely to streaming, which comes out of its summer slumber with fresh things to watch on Netflix, Prime Video, Hulu, HBO Max, and more. 

Among the shows we're particularly excited for: Mark Ruffalo leads an FBI task force in HBO's Task, Jude Law and Jason Bateman play troubled brothers in Netflix's Black Rabbit, Vince Gilligan and Rhea Seehorn reteam for Apple TV+'s Pluribus, and Anne Rice's Immortal Universe grows with AMC's Talamasca. But that's just a fraction of what's ahead.

Scroll on to see the all the new shows coming this fall to keep an eye on. Maybe one will be your next favorite! 

ALSO: The most anticipated TV shows of the fall

2 of 57 Jackson Lee Davis/Prime

The Runarounds (Prime Video)

Outer Banks co-creator Jonas Pate wrote this ditty about a group of high school boys who want to form the next great American rock 'n' roll band. In addition to dealing with a drummer who can't keep a beat, finding gigs to play, fending off and bringing in groupies, and recovering stolen equipment, the kids have all the usual teen drama to worry about, including telling their parents they're not going to college because they'd rather shred instead.

Premieres Monday, Sept. 1 on Prime Video

3 of 57 Marcell Piti/Paramount+

NCIS: Tony & Ziva (Paramount+)

Like our own universe, the NCIS universe is constantly expanding. But aside from a recent office opening up in Sydney, the modus operandi for TV's biggest procedural franchise is to recycle its stars, not make new ones. Michael Weatherly and Cote de Pablo reprise their roles as Anthony DiNozzo and Ziva David, the NCIS power couple who eventually ran off to Paris to raise their daughter, in this more serialized chapter of NCIS

Premieres Thursday, Sept. 4 on Paramount+

4 of 57 Aaron Epstein/Peacock

The Paper (Peacock)

Extra, extra! Read all about this new comedy from Greg Daniels and Michael Koman, a mockumentary that follows the workplace of a dying newspaper in Toledo, Ohio. Yes, we're burying the lede here: It's a spin-off of the megahit The Office, featuring at least one cast member (and character) from the original series: Oscar Nuñez as Oscar Martinez. The rest of the office will be led by The Patient's Domhnall Gleeson and The White LotusSabrina Impacciatore.

Premieres Thursday, Sept. 4 on Peacock

5 of 57 Netflix

Love Con Revenge (Netflix)

Cecilie Fjellhøy, who was Tinder swindled as the subject of Netflix's The Tinder Swindler, helps women who also became victims of romance scams get back at their grifters in this "gotcha!" investigative docuseries.

Premieres Friday, Sept. 5 on Netflix

6 of 57 Peter Kramer/HBO

Task (HBO)

Mark Ruffalo stars in this moody crime drama about a Philadelphia FBI agent who leads a task force to stop a crook (Tom Pelphrey) and his crew from committing more violent home invasions, but there's more to this bad guy than initially appears. If it feels close in tone to Mare of Easttown, that's because it was created by Mare writer Brad Ingelsby.

Premieres Sunday, Sept. 7 at 9/8c on HBO, HBO Max

7 of 57 Acorn TV

The Crow Girl (Acorn TV)

This adaptation of Erik Axl Sund's bestselling book follows a detective (Eve Myles) and psychotherapist (Katherine Kelly) as they track down a suspect who is killing young men. The six-episode Scandi noir series was released earlier this year in the U.K., but will stream in the U.S. exclusively on Acorn TV. 

Premieres Monday, Sept. 8 on Acorn TV

8 of 57 William White/Paramount+

Thirst Trap: The Fame. The Fantasy. The Fallout. (Paramount+)

TikTok star William White made a legion of fans — mostly older women — from lip-synching classic songs on video, but as his fame grew, so did the boldness of his followers. This docuseries traces the rise of a social media star, and the consequences of being in the public eye.

Premieres Tuesday, Sept. 9 on Paramount+

9 of 57 Netflix

aka Charlie Sheen (Netflix)

Charlie Sheen, of Spin City, Wall Street, and various mugshots fame, spills the beans on his turbulent life in this two-part tell-all documentary. Perhaps he'll reveal his biggest secret: how Two and a Half Men was so popular.

Premieres Wednesday, Sept. 10 on Netflix

10 of 57 Christopher Raphael/Prime Video

The Girlfriend (Prime Video)

Normally, any mom would be thrilled if her son brought home Olivia Cooke as his girlfriend. Not the overbearing mother played by Robin Wright in this pulpy thriller, who wages war against Cooke's character after feeling threatened that her lovestruck son is being snatched from her. Is it a mother's jealousy, or is something more sinister going on?

Premieres Wednesday, Sept. 10 on Prime Video

11 of 57 Getty Images

Celebrity Weakest Link (Fox)

The cutthroat trivia game show gets a celebrity* edition, with Jane Lynch returning as host.
*Fox's definition of "celebrity" may differ from your idea of who a celebrity is.

Premieres Monday, Sept. 15 at 9/8c on Fox

12 of 57 Netflix

Black Rabbit (Netflix)

Jude Law stars as a hotshot New York City restaurateur digging himself out of a financial hole when his brother (Jason Bateman) returns to town and asks for help. And that help involves saving him from having his fingers cut off by bookies he's in deep to. It's a tense crime drama with shades of Ozark and Uncut Gems.

Premieres Thursday, Sept. 18 on Netflix

13 of 57 Netflix

Haunted Hotel (Netflix)

Rick & Morty writer Matt Roller created this adult animated series about a single mother (voiced by Eliza Coupe) who runs a hotel that's haunted. 

Premieres Friday, Sept. 19 on Netflix

14 of 57 Fox

99 to Beat (Fox)

A winner-take-all mentality pervades this battle royale game show in which 100 competitors all hope to be the last one standing. It's Squid Game lite, as players take on simple challenges — melt a brick of ice, for example — and try not to be last, because whoever finishes last in each challenge is out of the game. Ken Jeong and Erin Andrews host.

Premieres Sunday, Sept. 21 at 8/7c on Fox before moving to Wednesdays at 9/8c

15 of 57 FX Networks

The Lowdown (FX)

Reservation Dogs creator Sterlin Harjo returns to Oklahoma for The Lowdown, a Tulsa noir starring Ethan Hawke as a man always seeking the truth, which frequently gets him into trouble with those trying to cover it up. Kyle MacLachlan, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Keith David, and Kaniehtiio Horn — Reservation Dogs' Deer Lady — also star.

Premieres Tuesday, Sept. 23 at 9/8c on FX

16 of 57 Amazon MGM Studios

Hotel Costiera (Prime Video)

If the spectacular views of Italy don't do the trick in Prime Video's new detective series Hotel Costiera, there's always Jesse Williams to stare at. The Grey's Anatomy vet plays a fixer at a luxury hotel in Italy who goes looking for the owner's missing daughter.

Premieres Wednesday, Sept. 24 on Prime Video

17 of 57 Marvel Television

Marvel Zombies (Disney+)

The Marvel universe gets a dose of what would happen if Thanos were a brain-eating zombie with Infinity Stones in this four-part expansion of the Disney+ What If...? animated anthology series. Hint: about the same as if he wasn't a zombie, but with more dangling flesh. 

Premieres Wednesday, Sept. 24 on Disney+

18 of 57 The CW

Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent (The CW)

I should make a crack about Canada and stolen poutine or something here, but when it comes to law and order, it's America that's currently the joke.

Premieres Wednesday, Sept. 24 at 8/7c on The CW

19 of 57 Prime

Cocaine Quarterback: Signal-Caller for the Cartel (Prime Video)

This three-episode docuseries follows the wild life of Owen Hanson, who went from USC volleyball player to USC football player to steroid dealer to one of the biggest international cocaine kingpins and worked with Mexican cartels. Cocaine Quarterback gets it straight from Hanson himself, with interviews with him while he is in prison.

Premieres Thursday, Sept. 25 on Prime Video

20 of 57 Ben Blackall/Netflix

House of Guinness (Netflix)

Peaky Blinders creator Steven Knight cracks open a new type of historical drama in this series that follows the four heirs to the Guinness empire in the 1860s after their father, Sir Benjamin Guinness, dies. Louis Partridge (Enola Holmes) and Anthony Boyle (Masters of the Air) star.

Premieres Thursday, Sept. 25 on Netflix

21 of 57 Netflix

Wayward (Netflix)

Mae Martin returns for their second Netflix series following the 2020-2021 romantic comedy Feel Good, but there's nothing romantic or feel good about Wayward, a new show set at an academy for troubled teens with psychological and folk horror vibes. Martin plays a cop who moves to a small Vermont town where a school for teens hides secrets. Toni Collette also stars.

Premieres Thursday, Sept. 25 on Netflix

22 of 57 Apple TV+

The Savant (Apple TV+)

Jessica Chastain stars as an undercover investigator who infiltrates secret online chat groups of white supremacists to stop hate crimes and large-scale attacks. It's based on a Cosmopolitan story from 2019, which makes sense because white supremacists just organize in the open now. 

Premieres Friday, Sept. 26 on Apple TV+

23 of 57 Daniel Delgado/Disney

Chad Powers (Hulu)

Glen Powell plays a down-on-his-luck college quarterback who blew his chance at the big time because he's kind of a jerk, so he does what any rational person would do: slaps on some facial prosthetics and pretends to be a different person to try out for a new team. If it sounds familiar, it's because it's based on a viral undercover stunt that Eli Manning pulled off when he created the character for his ESPN web series Eli's Places and tried out for Penn State.

Premieres Tuesday, Sept. 30 on Hulu

24 of 57 David Holloway/NBC

On Brand with Jimmy Fallon (NBC)

Late night's biggest shill will become primetime's biggest shill when Jimmy Fallon and NBC debut On Brand with Jimmy Fallon, a reality competition in which contestants help famous brands with new marketing campaigns aimed at parting consumers from their cash. It's like watching a commercial about making commercials! Capitalism at its blandest.

Premieres Tuesday, Sept. 30 at 10/9c on NBC

25 of 57 HBO Max

Charlotte's Web (HBO Max)

E.B. White's classic story of interspecies friendship comes to streaming via a three-episode miniseries written by Oscar winner Luke Matheny. The family-friendly movie tells the tale of a pig named Wilbur (Griffin Robert Faulkner and Elijah Wood) who learns life lessons from a spider (Amy Adams). 

Premieres Thursday, Oct. 2 on HBO Max

26 of 57 Netflix

Monster: The Ed Gein Story (Netflix)

Ryan Murphy's anthology series about the world's most famous murderers continues with Monster: The Ed Gein Story, the follow up to Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story. Charlie Hunnam stars as Ed Gein, the infamous small-town serial killer and grave robber from the 1950s whose story inspired the creation of Norman Bates. Laurie Metcalf, Tom Holland, and Olivia Williams will also star.

Premieres Friday, Oct. 3 on Netflix

27 of 57 Channel 4/Matt Frost

Brian and Maggie (PBS)

This well-reviewed two-episode limited series recreates a famous interview between BBC news anchor Brian Walden (Steve Coogan) and British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher (Harriet Walter).  

Premieres Sunday, Oct. 5 at 8/7c on PBS

28 of 57 Playground Entertainment and Masterpiece

Maigret (PBS)

PBS is airing a new detective series, which isn't anything new. What is new is that this one is French and very handsome! The series follows Chief Inspector Jules Maigret (Benjamin Wainwright) as he solves crimes in Paris for Police Judiciaire. The character of Maigret, created by Georges Simenon in 1931, is one of the most popular literary detectives ever, but this is the first time we'll see him in contemporary times.  

Premieres Sunday, Oct. 5 at 9/8c on PBS

29 of 57 Green Productions, Bender Brown Productions, Keshet 12, the IEF, & Paramount+

Red Alert (Paramount+)

Paramount+ acquired American streaming rights to this Israeli scripted miniseries about the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks, drawing from the stories of those who survived it.

Premieres Tuesday, Oct. 7 on Paramount+

30 of 57 Alfonso "Pompo" Bresciani/Netflix

Boots (Netflix)

This coming-of-age story set in the 1990s follows a closeted gay man (Miles Heizer) who joins the Marine Corps. The comedy-drama is based on the Greg Cope White book The Pink Marine, and was one of the last TV shows worked on by the legendary Norman Lear.

Premieres Thursday, Oct. 9 on Netflix

31 of 57 Disney/Jake Giles Netter

9-1-1: Nashville (ABC)

This fall, chicken won't be the hottest thing Nashville is famous for. 9-1-1: Nashville is a spin-off of ABC's popular first-responder drama 9-1-1, but aside from changing locations to Tennessee, this one will supposedly differ from the mothership by including more interpersonal drama. It's 9-1-1 combined with Nashville, see? Chris O'Donnell, Jessica Capshaw, and LeAnn Rimes star.

Premieres Thursday, Oct. 9 at 9/8c on ABC

32 of 57 Apple TV+

The Last Frontier (Apple TV+)

The Blacklist creator Jon Bokenkamp — who co-created this series with Richard D'Ovidio — stays in his lane with this twisty thriller about a U.S. Marshal (Jason Clarke) in Alaska who hunts down escaped fugitives after a plane carrying some of the country's most hardened criminals crashes in the wilderness. It's got an NBC crook-of-the-week feel with an Apple budget. 

Premieres Friday, Oct. 10 on Apple TV+

33 of 57 Sarah Shatz/HBO

The Chair Company (HBO)

Zach Kanin and Tim Robinson, the creators of Netflix's I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson, get conspiratorial in this comedy starring Robinson as a working stiff who goes down a deep rabbit hole. 

Premieres Sunday, Oct. 12 at 10/9c on HBO, HBO Max

34 of 57 Matt Barnes/CBS

DMV (CBS)

In CBS's lone new comedy this fall, the Department of Motor Vehicles is no longer the butt of jokes; it's in on the joke. SNL's Tim Meadows and Colin From AccountsHarriet Dyer star as employees of the East Hollywood DMV in this sitcom that is hopefully more fun than renewing your car registration.

Premieres Monday, Oct. 13 at 8:30/7:30c on CBS

35 of 57 Shudder/AMC+

Guts & Glory (Shudder, AMC+)

Greg Nicotero, The Walking Dead's master of gory practical effects, hosts this reality competition series that combines the chaos of creating a horror movie and intensity of a game where elimination is around every corner as players engage in horror-themed challenges. Nicotero describes it as what would happen if "Survivor and The Blair Witch Project had a baby."

Premieres Tuesday, Oct. 14 on Shudder, AMC+

36 of 57 Netflix

Splinter Cell: Deathwatch (Netflix)

The Ubisoft military stealth video game franchise Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell gets the animated treatment for Netflix, with John Wick screenwriter Derek Kolstad penning the series. Liev Schreiber voices gaming icon Sam Fisher, a black ops agent who is pulled back into the field when a young operative asks for his help. You can hear the sound of his night vision goggles powering up, can't you?

Premieres Tuesday, Oct. 14 on Netflix

37 of 57 Disney/Daniel Delgado Jr.

Murdaugh: Death in the Family (Hulu)

In this true-crime drama series, Jason Clarke stars as Alex Murdaugh, the South Carolina lawyer at the center of one of this decade's most famous murder cases, who was arrested for killing his wife, Maggie (played by Patricia Arquette in the series), and son, Paul (Johnny Berchtold). Death in the Family follows the tragic incident that put pressure on the Murdaughs to act, and the deadly results that followed.

Premieres Wednesday, Oct. 15 on Hulu

38 of 57 Brooke Palmer/Peacock

Devil in Disguise: John Wayne Gacy (Peacock)

Severance's Michael Chernus stars as notorious serial killer John Wayne Gacy, who killed dozens of young men and boys in the 1970s, in this dramatized true-crime series.

Premieres Thursday, Oct. 16 on Peacock

39 of 57 Apple TV+

Mr. Scorsese (Apple TV+)

"As far back as I can remember, I always wanted to be a film director," Martin Scorsese said, probably. The Goodfellas mastermind isn't afraid to let his movies run a little long, so why wouldn't a documentary on his life maximize its time? This five-part series from Rebecca Miller looks at the famed director's life and his influence on modern cinema.

Premieres Friday, Oct. 17 on Apple TV+

40 of 57 Sergei Bachlakov/CBS

Sheriff Country (CBS)

CBS's new "spin-off Fridays" kick off with the Fire Country-inspired Sheriff Country, starring Morena Baccarin as Mickey Fox, who brings law and order to Edgewater, Calif., the same place Fire Country's Bode Donovan tries to keep not on fire. 

Premieres Friday, Oct. 17 at 9/8c on CBS

41 of 57 John Paul Filo/CBS

Boston Blue (CBS)

After several years of working in New York on Blue Bloods, Donnie Wahlberg is moving back to Boston! Well, in reality he'll be in Toronto, where this Blue Bloods spin-off is mostly filmed. Wahlberg takes his character Danny Reagan to Beantown, where he's partnered up with Lena Silver (Sonequa Martin-Green), a rising star in the Boston Police Department who also comes from a law enforcement family. We'll see how many episodes it takes for Reagan to switch from being a Mets fan to being a Red Sox fan. You know Wahlberg is doing everything in his power to make it happen.

Premieres Friday, Oct. 17 at 10/9c on CBS

42 of 57 Connie Chornuk/CBS

The Road (CBS)

Sorry, Cormac McCarthy fans. This is just a country music reality competition series that challenges performers to go on tour, not a grisly, post-apocalyptic story of a family avoiding cannibals. Keith Urban, Gretchen Wilson, and Blake Shelton serve as mentors, and Yellowstone creator Taylor Sheridan executive produces alongside Shelton and Urban.

Premieres Sunday, Oct. 19 at 9/8c on CBS

43 of 57 Ben Blackall/Prime

Harlan Coben's Lazarus (Prime Video)

Harlan Coben, whose books have been turned into more than a dozen TV shows in the last several years, could smash his hands on a laptop keyboard and turn whatever gobbledygook came out into a hit series. The latest adaptation of the prolific writer's work is Harlan Coben's Lazarus, which stars Sam Claflin as a man who experiences unexplained disturbances after his father (Bill Nighy) dies by suicide. 

Premieres Wednesday, Oct. 22 on Prime Video

44 of 57 Brooke Palmer/HBO

IT: Welcome to Derry (HBO)

Warner Bros. is very high on its own supply (of IP), so following the box office success of the IT movies, we're getting a television prequel. Set in 1962, IT: Welcome to Derry goes behind the red nose of demonic clown monster Pennywise to dig up his origins when a couple and their young son move to Derry, Maine, and bad things start to happen. Bill Skarsgärd will play Pennywise again.

Premieres Sunday, Oct. 26 at 9/8c on HBO and HBO Max

45 of 57 David Gennard/AMC

Talamasca: The Secret Order (AMC)

The supernatural and the undead have been living their best lives on AMC, thanks to shows like Interview with the Vampire and Mayfair Witches, but their luck may have run out. Anne Rice's Immortal Universe is expanding with Anne Rice's Talamasca: The Secret Order, a drama focusing on the secret society that tracks the witches, vampires, and other supernatural creatures that run amok all over the world. Nicholas Denton, Elizabeth McGovern, and William Fichtner star.

Premieres Sunday, Oct. 26 at 9/8c on AMC, AMC+

46 of 57 Apple TV+

Down Cemetery Road (Apple TV+)

Emma Thompson and Ruth Wilson play the leads in this crime thriller, which is an adaptation of Mick Herron's book of the same name. (Herron is also the author of the Slough House novel series, which was adapted by Apple TV+ into Slow Horses.) When a house explodes and a girl goes missing, private investigator Zoë Boehm (Thompson) and concerned citizen Sarah Tucker (Wilson) start digging, and find themselves in a deep conspiracy.

Premieres Wednesday, Oct. 29 on Apple TV+

47 of 57 YouTube/screengrab

Robin Hood (MGM+)

This new drama claims to bring a "modern energy" to the classic story of Robin Hood, the man who stole from the rich and gave to the poor. (We could use one of those right about now.) How do we know it has "modern energy"? Mr. Hood, played by Jack Patten, goes by "Rob." 

Premieres Sunday, Nov. 2 at 9/8c on MGM+

48 of 57 Kenny Laubbacher/HBO

I Love LA (HBO)

In-demand comedian, actress, and writer Rachel Sennott (Bottoms) is behind this new comedy about a group of friends in Los Angeles. Jordan Firstman and Josh Hutcherson also star. 

Premieres Sunday, Nov. 2 at 10:30/9:30c on HBO, HBO Max

49 of 57 Paramount+

Crutch (Paramount+)

Tracy Morgan stars in this spin-off of CBS's The Neighborhood, playing a Harlem shop owner whose empty nest fills up again when his son and daughter move back into his house.

Premieres Monday, Nov. 3 on Paramount+

50 of 57 Peacock

All Her Fault (Peacock)

Succession's Sarah Snook stars in and executive produces this adaptation of Andrea Mara's 2021 novel about a mother (Snook) who goes to pick up her young son from his first play date, but when she arrives at the house, she doesn't recognize the woman living there and her son is nowhere to be found. The twisty suburban thriller about a community with dark secrets also stars Jake Lacy, Dakota Fanning, and Sophia Lillis

Premieres Thursday, Nov. 6 on Peacock

51 of 57 Larry Horricks/Netflix

Death by Lightning (Netflix)

Former U.S. president James A. Garfield didn't get killed by lightning, but Shot by Charles J. Guiteau didn't have the same ring to it. Michael Shannon stars as Garfield — the president, not the cat — in this historical drama about his life and the shooting that eventually led to his death.

Premieres Thursday, Nov. 6 on Netflix

52 of 57 Apple TV+

Pluribus (Apple TV+)

As of late August, here's what we know about the plot of Pluribus: nothing. Well, the logline teases that "the most miserable person on Earth must save the world from happiness," but that's it. But we're still more excited about this show than any other coming out this fall because of what we do know: Vince Gilligan, the creator of Breaking Bad and co-creator of Better Call Saul, and Rhea Seehorn, who played Better Call Saul's Kim Wexler, are involved as creator and star, respectively. That's good enough for us. 

Premieres Friday, Nov. 7 on Apple TV+

53 of 57 Matt Miller/NBC

Stumble (NBC)

NBC can't say no to a mockumentary, and Stumble, one of the network's new shows this fall, looks into the world of competitive junior college cheerleading while a camera crew gets it all on film. Jenn Lyon and Taran Killam star.

Premieres Friday, Nov. 7 at 8:30/7:30c on NBC

54 of 57 Netflix

The Beast in Me (Netflix)

Claire Danes plays a famous author reeling from the death of her son and struggling with the ensuing writers block in this eight-episode thriller, which re-teams Danes with her Homeland boss Howard Gordon, who serves as showrunner on The Beast in Me. Danes' character finds inspiration — or is it something else? — when a real estate mogul (Matthew Rhys) who was once the prime suspect in his wife's murder moves in next door. 

Premieres Thursday, Nov. 13 on Netflix

55 of 57 Yale University Art Gallery

The American Revolution (PBS)

Become an expert in the American Revolution in just 12 hours after watching this documentary series from the king of documentary series, Ken Burns

Premieres Sunday, Nov. 16 at 8/7c on PBS

56 of 57 Prime Video

The Mighty Nein (Prime Video)

The comedic Dungeons & Dragons adventures inspired by Critical Role's campaigns continue with The Mighty Nein, a new campaign set in the same realm but decades after The Legend of Vox Machina.

Premieres Wednesday, Nov. 19 on Prime Video