Comedy • Drama • Romance • Publishing
Age was just a number.
Legacy is the story that remains.

Nearly a decade after Younger redefined what it meant to start over, Younger: The New Era brings its beloved characters back to a New York City publishing world transformed by algorithms, AI-driven trends, and viral success measured in seconds rather than substance.
The lie that once powered everything is long gone.
But the truth, it turns out, is far more complicated.
Liza Miller (Sutton Foster) is no longer pretending to be younger — yet she’s facing the most daunting challenge of her career. Now editor-in-chief, Liza must defend the value of lived experience, intuition, and human storytelling in an industry increasingly obsessed with data, speed, and automation. In a world where machines predict bestsellers before they’re written, Liza fights to prove that heart can’t be coded.
Sutton Foster returns with the warmth, wit, and emotional intelligence that made Liza iconic — portraying a woman who has earned her place, but still questions what success costs. Her relationship with Charles (Peter Hermann) remains unfinished business: mature, tender, and shadowed by choices neither of them can undo.
Across the table stands Kelsey Peters (Hilary Duff), back from Los Angeles not as a dreamer, but as a global media powerhouse. Bold, ambitious, and unapologetically digital-first, Kelsey’s vision for Empirical Press challenges everything Liza built — and tests a friendship forged in risk, loyalty, and shared reinvention. Their dynamic is no longer mentor and protégé, but equals on opposite sides of the future.
Meanwhile, Maggie Amato (Debi Mazar) continues to be the unapologetic soul of Brooklyn — fearless, creative, and gloriously authentic. In a world chasing relevance, Maggie proves that real art only deepens with time, and that self-expression never goes out of style.
Josh (Nico Tortorella), now navigating fatherhood and a new artistic chapter, embodies the emotional core of the series’ evolution — a reminder that growth doesn’t mean abandoning who you were, but understanding who you’ve become.

Set against fashion-forward Manhattan, late-night offices, and the ever-shifting publishing landscape, Younger: The New Era explores life after reinvention — when the masks are gone, the stakes are higher, and the question isn’t who are you pretending to be? but what are you willing to fight for now?
Smart, stylish, and emotionally resonant, this reunion isn’t about turning back the clock.
It’s about owning the chapters that came before — and writing the ones that matter most.

In 2026, Liza Miller proves once again:
You’re never too old.
You’re never too young.
And it’s never too late to tell your story — your way.
