Here’s a list of TV shows that aired (or are expected to air) during the 2023-24 season (roughly September 2023 through August 2024) but won’t be back for the 2024-25 season. Not finding a show that you believe has been cancelled? Check our other season lists or our network, cable, and streaming show status pages.
Latest additions: Vikings: Valhalla (Netflix), Sort Of (Max), The Family Chantel (TLC), The Venery of Samantha Bird (Starz), Pitch Perfect: Bumper in Berlin (Peacock), Hilda (Netflix), Lando (Disney+), Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel (HBO), Nautilus (Disney+), The Spiderwick Chronicles (Disney+), All Rise (OWN), The Peripheral (Prime Video), Top Boy (Netflix), and Good Bones (HGTV).
This list will be updated as the season progresses, so feel free to bookmark and check back. If we’ve missed something, please let me know.
61st Street (The CW)
A legal thriller revolving around a young black athlete who gets caught up in a corrupt legal system, this drama was dropped by AMC before the second and final season could air. The CW picked up both seasons.
All Rise (OWN)
This courtroom drama was cancelled after two seasons on CBS and was picked up by OWN for a third. After one season, the cable channel dropped the series, too.
Andor (Disney+)
A Star Wars prequel series, this show concludes with its second season, which will lead into the events of the Rogue One feature film.
Archer (Comedy Central)
This animated spy comedy revolves around the adventures of Sterling Archer (H. Jon Benjamin) and other agents at the International Secret Intelligence Service (ISIS). Season 14 is the end.
Big Mouth (Netflix)
An animated comedy series, this show follows a group of teenagers navigating through puberty and has oversized hormone monsters influencing them. It ends with season eight.
The Family Chantel (TLC)
This reality series follows the relationship of 90 Day Fiancé couple Chantel Everett and Pedro Jimeno. Season five is the end of their relationship and the show.
Good Bones (HGTV)
Mother and daughter duo Karen E. Laine and Mina Starsiak Hawk flip houses together in Indianapolis. The renovation series ends with its eighth season.
The Handmaid’s Tale (Hulu)
A dystopian series based on the novel by Margaret Atwood, this award-winning drama ends with its sixth season.
Hilda (Netflix)
An animated series, this show follows Hilda (Bella Ramsey) as she travels to a magical wilderness and makes friends. Season three is the end.
Lando (Disney+)
Part of the Star Wars franchise, this series was to revolve around a young Lando Calrissian. The project will now be a feature film.
A League of Their Own (Prime Video)
An adaptation of the 1992 film, this comedy-drama series revolves around the Rockford Peaches, a women’s team in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League of 1943. It was renewed for an abbreviated second and final season. The streamer later cancelled those plans.
Magnum PI (NBC)
CBS cancelled this reboot of the 1980s crime drama series after four seasons. NBC picked up the show for another season and split the 20-episode order up over two broadcast seasons. It was later confirmed that the show’s been cancelled a second time, and season five is the end.
Metropolis (Apple TV+)
The streamer dropped its plans for a series based on the classic 1927 film and book of the same name.
Nautilus (Disney+)
Telling the origin story of Captain Nemo from Jules Verne’s 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea novel, this show was cancelled due to cost-cutting. The episodes have been filmed and will be shopped elsewhere.
The Peripheral (Prime Video)
A sci-fi drama revolving around a woman (Chloë Grace Moretz) trying to keep her family together, this show was initially renewed for a second season. That renewal was rescinded due to production delays caused by the ongoing strikes.
Pitch Perfect: Bumper in Berlin (Peacock)
Revolving around Adam Devine’s character from the Pitch Perfect movies, this comedy series was renewed for a second season. That order was rescinded due to delays caused by the actors and writers strikes.
Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel (HBO)
This sports news magazine debuted in 1995, won over 32 Emmy Awards, and amassed more than 300 episodes. Season 29 is the end.
Seasoned (Showtime)
In April 2023, the cable channel ordered a series inspired by the relationship between Mandy Patinkin and his wife, Kathryn Grody. Two months later, Showtime pulled the plug, but Sony Pictures Television planned to shop the series to other outlets.
Sex Education (Netflix)
A British comedy-drama about a young man (Asa Butterfield) whose mother is a sex therapist (Gillian Anderson), this show wraps up with its fourth season.
Sort Of (Max)
This comedy series follows Sabi Mehboob (co-creator Bilal Baig), a gender-fluid twenty-something, as they try to balance their professional and personal lives. Season three is the end.
The Spiderwick Chronicles (Disney+)
Based on a series of fantasy novels, the streamer dropped plans to air this show due to Disney’s plans to focus on company-owned properties.
Star Trek: Discovery (Paramount+)
Initially set a decade ahead of the original Star Trek series, the crew of the USS Discovery ends up traveling 900 years into the future. Season five is the end.
Star Wars: The Bad Batch (Disney+)
This animated sci-fi show is a sequel to the 2008-20 Star Wars: The Clone Wars series and revolves around a group of elite clone troopers with genetic mutations. It ends with season three.
Top Boy (Netflix)
The streamer revived a British crime drama that had been cancelled after two seasons. The revival lasted three seasons.
The Venery of Samantha Bird (Starz)
This series revolves around a woman who enters a romance with her childhood sweetheart after returning to her hometown. The series was cancelled before all of the episodes were produced.
Vikings: Valhalla (Netflix)
Set 100 years after the events in the original Vikings series, this historical drama follows the life of Leif Erikson (Sam Corlett). Season three ends the series.
You (Netflix)
A psychological thriller, this drama follows Joe Goldberg (Penn Badgley), a charming serial killer. Season five is the end of the road.
What do you think? Have any of your favorite shows been cancelled? Which ones are you sorry to see end?