Euphoria is officially over.
After months of speculation, HBO has confirmed there will be no fourth season, making Sunday’s dramatic Season 3 closer the end of the line for the provocative show.
The decision brings an end to one of the defining TV shows of the Gen-Z era, which made superstars of cast members like Zendaya, Sydney Sweeney and Jacob Elordi.
But it also follows a season that became the most divisive of Euphoria‘s run, attracting record audiences while drawing backlash from critics and viewers over its graphic depictions of sex, violence and drug abuse.
But what led to the decision to end the show — and how did the finale bring the story to a close? Beware: this article contains spoilers for the third season.
How HBO brought ‘Euphoria’ to an end
The news that Euphoria is ending after seven years may not come as a surprise to many viewers.
Season 3 felt less like a new beginning and more like a chaotic, divisive final chapter, with several major storylines reaching violent or emotional breaking points.
Sunday’s finale killed off Zendaya’s troubled protagonist, Rue. Her death from an overdose of fentanyl-laced pills brought the show’s central story to a devastating close. Another key character, Jacob Elordi’s Nate, died in the penultimate episode.
Jacob Elordi’s character was killed off in the penultimate episode of Euphoria Season 3.
With two of the show’s most important characters gone, the finale left little room for another season and served as a definitive ending.
Sam Levinson, the show’s creator, told The New York Times’ Popcast podcast: “In terms of the story that we set out to tell, which is a story about addiction and its consequences, this feels like the end to me.”
He added that the Euphoria story is “a tragic one in the end — but it’s also the truth. If you are experimenting or taking drugs today, it’s very possible it’ll kill you.”
Big ratings, mixed reviews
The ending comes despite strong viewing figures. The Season 3 premiere attracted more than 12.3 million viewers in the U.S., according to Warner Bros. Discovery, making it the biggest launch in the show’s history and a 68% increase on Season 2’s premiere.
Critics were far less enthusiastic. They accused the HBO drama of leaning too heavily into shock value, with The Guardian calling it “a grubby, humorless work of torture porn” and The Hollywood Reporter saying the series “leaps closer to flashy irrelevance.”
Season 3 earned a score of 56 out of 100 on review-aggregation site Metacritic, down from 67 for Season 1 and 74 for Season 2.

Sydney Sweeney’s portrayal of an OnlyFans model sparked backlash from sex workers.
(Patrick Wymore/HBO)
One of the season’s most divisive storylines followed Sweeney’s Cassie as she built an OnlyFans career. Real-life creators were particularly angered by scenes in which she dressed as a baby and a dog.
For some fans, the controversy highlighted Euphoria‘s shift away from the grounded character drama that helped make the show a hit. Levinson defended Cassie’s arc, saying, “What we wanted to always find is the other layer of absurdity.”
Why the show was ready to end
The decision to end Euphoria also comes after years of upheaval behind the scenes.
Fans waited nearly four years between Seasons 2 and 3, as production was delayed by scheduling conflicts and Hollywood strikes, fueling doubts about whether the show would return at all.
The delays came as Euphoria‘s cast became some of Hollywood’s hottest young stars. Zendaya, Sweeney, Elordi and Hunter Schafer all saw their careers soar between seasons, making it harder to reunite them for another lengthy production.
The series was also shaped by the deaths of two actors closely associated with the show. Angus Cloud, who played fan-favorite character Fez, died from an accidental overdose in July 2023 at age 25. Eric Dane, who portrayed Cal Jacobs, died in February 2026 after being diagnosed with ALS.
Dane appeared posthumously in two episodes of Season 3, while Cloud returned in the finale through a flashback sequence.
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