MobLand Season 2 Is Coming to Paramount+ in 2026 β Here's What We Know
TL;DR: Guy Ritchie confirmed MobLand Season 2 will hit Paramount+ before the end of 2026, likely September. Filming wrapped in March 2026. Tom Hardy, Pierce Brosnan, and Helen Mirren are all returning. If you haven't started Season 1 yet, now's the time.
Guy Ritchie just handed us the timeline we've been waiting for. Speaking to ScreenRant about his film In the Grey, the Gentlemen director and MobLand producer didn't bury the lede: "We finished our bit, so we're wrapping up that whole series now. We've got MobLand before the end of the year."
That's as direct as it gets. Season 2 is done. It's coming in 2026.
Why You Should Actually Care About a Second Season
Here's what makes this renewal feel less like a typical streaming shuffle and more like a genuine win: 26 million viewers tuned into MobLand Season 1 between March and June 2025. That's enough to land it as Paramount+'s second most-watched original, right behind Landman. For a British crime drama about family power struggles β not exactly a broad-appeal premise β those numbers are substantial.
Paramount+ greenlit Season 2 by June 23, 2025, less than three months after the March 30 premiere. That speed matters. It signals the platform saw something worth protecting. The show hit a 9.3/10 on IMDB during its run, which typically means a passionate, vocal audience rather than casual browsers clicking through. Those are the people who drive word-of-mouth. Those are the people who actually return for Season 2.
The cast alone tells you this isn't a filler project. Tom Hardy leading, Pierce Brosnan playing the old-guard patriarch with reptilian menace, Helen Mirren pulling strings from the shadows. That's a lineup Paramount+ is betting real money on.
Tom Hardy's Hint About Where This Show Could Go
Back in April 2025, Hardy dropped something revealing to Collider. He wasn't just talking about Season 2 β he was sketching out the show's potential five-year arc.
"The plan is definitely to see more seasons," Hardy said. "The question is: Does it become international?"
Then he got specific in a way that felt less like promotional talking points and more like genuine creative thinking: "There are families that are involved in each European country that are vying for power to have that status to be able to move these kinds of commodities through. And who polices that and how that fits into a world stage."
That's the voice of someone thinking about Gomorrah or ZeroZeroZero β shows that didn't just stay local, they expanded into continental crime mythology. What most coverage misses: Hardy's ambition here tracks almost exactly with what Saviano and Ferrara did across three seasons of ZeroZeroZero, but the crucial difference is that Ritchie's visual grammar is built for velocity, not slow-burn realism. If MobLand goes pan-European, it won't look like Italian prestige TV β it'll look like a Guy Ritchie movie that never ends, and that's either thrilling or exhausting depending on how tightly the writing holds. Whether Season 2 actually goes there or just lays groundwork for it, that's the ambition living inside this production right now.
The set photos that leaked in December 2025 showed Brosnan and Mirren back in character. A February leak caught Hardy filming along the River Thames with Joanne Froggatt. Nothing exotic yet. But the groundwork is being built. And Ritchie doesn't build small.
The Production Timeline (And What It Means for Your Watch Calendar)
Here's what's locked in:
- Season 1 premiered: March 30, 2025
- Season 2 filming began: November 2025
- Production wrapped: March 2026
- Confirmed release window: Before end of 2026
- Most likely premiere: September 2026 (based on industry tracking and Ritchie's public timeline)
Ritchie flagged MobLand as one of three or four projects dropping before December 2026, alongside The Gentlemen Season 2 and something called Wife & Dog. That's a crowded personal slate β which probably explains why he's being cagey about an exact date. But a wrapped production + a public commitment to "before the end of the year" usually means the marketing machine is already warming up.
Expect a trailer sometime in July or August. A Helen Mirrenβnarrated teaser already appeared in a Paramount+ promotional spot earlier this year, which suggests the gears are turning.
Where to Actually Watch It (And When)
MobLand Season 2 will premiere on Paramount+ β that's the exclusive streaming home. You'll need a Paramount+ subscription to catch it when it drops. No theatrical release, no theatrical window beforehand. Built as a streaming series from the ground up.
For viewers in India, the picture gets a bit more complicated. Paramount+ operates through regional partnerships, and Season 1 was available to Indian subscribers, but Paramount+ India's rollout can sometimes lag the US premiere by a week or two. Movie OTT's where-to-watch tracker will have the confirmed India availability once Paramount+ finalizes regional distribution β it's worth bookmarking now and checking back in August 2026.
JioCinema is worth monitoring. Paramount has licensed content through JioCinema's premium tier before, so there's a chance Season 2 lands there alongside the Paramount+ platform release. Same goes for SonyLIV, though less likely. Netflix and Prime Video don't have confirmed deals for MobLand at this stage.
Here's what actually matters: don't wait for release day to find out where it is. Movie OTT's trackers get updated as soon as platforms announce availability, so check there a week before the expected premiere rather than panicking on September 1st.
Should You Start Season 1 Now?
Yes. Completely. If you liked Peaky Blinders, Succession, or Ritchie's The Gentlemen series, this is built specifically for you.
Season 1 works as a standalone run β it's not a cliffhanger-heavy show that leaves you desperate for answers. But the character work and the power dynamics that Ritchie sets up definitely pay off more richly if you've lived with these people for a full season before Season 2 arrives. The show moves fast. The dialogue snaps. Nobody explains the underworld to you β you learn it by watching Hardy navigate it.
The thing that keeps coming back to me about Season 1: it's kinetic without feeling rushed. There's actual breathing room in the storytelling, which is rare for prestige crime drama right now. Hardy does quiet menace better than almost anyone working in television, and here he's surrounded by actors who match his energy rather than compete with it. (That scene in episode 4 where Brosnan's character dismantles a rival's argument over a dinner table without raising his voice once? Pure Ritchie.)
Get through Season 1 between now and August 2026. You'll be glad you did.
The Numbers That Actually Matter
Let's be specific about what made Season 1 work:
26 million viewers during the first-season run makes it the second most-watched original on Paramount+ behind Landman. To put that in context, Landman launched with the full weight of a Taylor Sheridan marketing blitz and the Yellowstone audience pipeline behind it. MobLand pulled those numbers without either advantage, relying almost entirely on Hardy's star power and Ritchie's name recognition β a quieter path to a massive result, and arguably the more impressive one for the platform's long-term strategy.
The 76% Rotten Tomatoes score for Season 1 sits in solid territory without being a critical slam-dunk. What's actually interesting is the gap between critics and audiences β that usually signals a show that connects with viewers even when the critical establishment holds back. That's exactly the kind of audience that returns for Season 2 and drives long-term franchise success.
Season 1 launched and Paramount+ confirmed the renewal less than three months later. That's fast. It tells you the platform saw something worth building around.
Production is handled through MTV Entertainment Studios and 101 Studios. No budget has been publicly confirmed, but the cast β Hardy, Brosnan, Mirren β puts this firmly in premium territory.
What Comes Next: Trailers, Dates, and the International Question
Honestly, it's striking how much is still unconfirmed despite production being completely finished. That's partly by design β Ritchie's juggling multiple projects simultaneously, and promotional bandwidth is limited. But it also means the marketing push is probably about to accelerate hard.
Look for a trailer drop in July or August 2026. A September premiere feels like the working assumption across industry tracking, though Paramount+ hasn't made it official yet. Once they do, Movie OTT will have the confirmed regional platform picture updated within hours.
The bigger story to follow: Does Season 2 actually start building out those European crime family storylines Hardy mentioned? The part I am most curious about is whether Ritchie can resist his own instincts β his best work thrives on tight geography (London, specifically), and going continental could dilute the very thing that made Season 1 land so hard. If it does expand, you're watching a show position itself for the kind of long-running franchise that becomes a platform anchor for years. That's what Paramount+ needs. And given what Season 1 delivered, it's not unreasonable to think Season 2 is where that ambition starts taking actual shape on screen.




