Yes, Supacell Season 2 is officially happening and currently in production. Netflix confirmed the renewal on August 13, 2024, just weeks after Season 1 dominated the global Top 10 for six consecutive weeks. Filming began in South London in late October 2025 after multiple delays. Four new cast members were officially announced in March 2026. No firm release date exists, but late 2026 or 2027 is the most realistic window.
I have watched Supacell twice, taken notes both times, and still missed things on the rewatch. That is the kind of show Rapman built, one that rewards patience and attention. The delays have been frustrating, but every confirmed detail about Season 2 suggests the team is building something bigger and more emotionally complex than the first run. Here is everything confirmed so far, separated from the rumours flooding search results right now.
What Is the Supacell Season 2 Release Date?
No official release date has been announced. Filming started in late October 2025 after the production was pushed back twice from an original Q1 2025 start and a second rescheduled date in Summer 2025. Given that Season 1 filmed July through December 2022 and did not premiere until June 27, 2024, the heavy VFX pipeline alone makes 2027 more realistic than late 2026, despite optimistic projections circulating online.
What Is the Season 2 Production Status Right Now?
As of April 2026, cameras are actively rolling in South London. Rapman posted a script photo on Instagram in October 2025 with the message confirming filming was underway, adding that it would be worth the wait. The production is still in principal photography, meaning post-production and the extensive VFX work required to render the powers has not yet started. Koby Adom joined as a co-director alongside Rapman, splitting the directorial load.
Who Are the New Cast Members in Supacell Season 2?
Four new actors were confirmed in March 2026. Frank Bourke joins as Peter (previously Fra Pavel in HBO’s His Dark Materials and Peter in Netflix’s Toxic Town). Tiana Simone plays Nia (Stranger Things: The First Shadow). Richard Keep plays Mark (We Were the Lucky Ones, FBI International, Netflix’s The Eddy). Ed Allenby plays Brian (A Killer Next Door). Their exact roles within the Organisation storyline are being kept tightly under wraps.
Which Original Cast Members Are Returning?
The core five survivors are all confirmed back: Tosin Cole as Michael, Eric Kofi-Abrefa as Andre, Calvin Demba as Rodney, Nadine Mills as Sabrina, and Josh Tedeku as Tazer. Yasmin Monet Prince returns as Veronica, now positioned as the primary antagonist after seizing control of the Organisation. Rayxia Ojo as Sharleen, Giacomo Mancini as Spud, and Eddie Marsan as Ray are also expected back based on production reports.
What Happened to Ghetts and the Character Krazy?
Ghetts, who played Krazy, will not return for Season 2. In December 2025, Deadline reported he was dropped from the series after pleading guilty to causing death by dangerous driving. The Guardian confirmed in March 2026 that he received a 12-year prison sentence. Netflix has not issued a formal statement on how the creative team will handle Krazy’s absence within the story, but the character’s removal is now permanent.
What Will Supacell Season 2 Be About?
Rapman has described Season 2 as the point where the characters stop running and start fighting back. “When I come back, they’re all gonna f*ing pay”** is the line that closes Season 1, and Rapman has confirmed the entire season is built around that shift in energy. He called Season 1 his “Batman Begins,” meaning Season 2 is where the group stops being ordinary people with powers and becomes something more deliberate and dangerous. Michael’s altered timeline is central because the future glimpsed in the pilot no longer exists.
Who Is Directing Supacell Season 2?
Rapman is returning as showrunner and director, having written every episode of both seasons himself. Joining him for the first time as co-director is Koby Adom, who helmed multiple episodes of the BAFTA-winning Top Boy as well as Noughts + Crosses for the BBC. Adom’s background in grounded, street-level London drama makes him a precise creative match for the show’s tone. Executive producers for Netflix are Anna Ferguson and Steve Searle, with Mouktar Mohammed and Henrietta Lee producing for New Wave.
How Many Episodes Will Season 2 Have?
No official episode count has been confirmed, but the expectation is six episodes, mirroring Season 1’s structure. Rapman has mapped out a complete three-season arc and has stated publicly he already knows how Season 2 ends. That kind of pre-planned architecture typically means tight, deliberate storytelling rather than padding, which is exactly what made the first six-episode run feel so precise. Netflix has not indicated any expansion to the episode order.
Will There Be a Season 3 of Supacell?
No announcement yet, but Rapman has been consistent. He pitched Supacell as a three-season story from the beginning, told Netflix before Season 1 premiered that he already knew how Season 2 ends, and has publicly said the entire arc is mapped. Season 3 is not greenlit, but the creative foundation for it exists. Whether Netflix orders it will depend entirely on Season 2’s viewership performance, which given the show’s 40.9 million Season 1 views in 2024 alone, seems like a reasonable bet.
Where Will Supacell Season 2 Stream?
Exclusively on Netflix worldwide, same as Season 1. There are no theatrical components, no broadcast deals, and no confirmed spin-offs. Rapman is currently attached to a separate Netflix project, a crime biopic called The Council, but has confirmed full focus remains on completing Season 2 first. When the season does drop, Netflix’s standard global simultaneous release model means every market gets it on the same day, likely dropping all six episodes at once.
The Wait Is Long, But the Foundation Is Rare
Very few shows arrive the way Supacell did, built from scratch with no existing IP, no Marvel safety net, and a creator whose entire creative identity is baked into every frame. The production delays are real and frustrating, but so is the ambition behind what Rapman is building. Season 1 earned a 100% Rotten Tomatoes score on debut and 33.4 million views in its first six weeks on Netflix’s global chart. Season 2 has four new cast members, a co-director whose Top Boy credentials speak directly to the show’s tonal register, and a writer who already knows the ending. That is not a show being made on autopilot.






