All's Fair Season 2 Release Date, Cast and Spoilers: Everything We Know About Kim Kardashian's Hulu Return
The verdict on All's Fair is still out—yet the audience has already ordered another hearing.

The first thing you notice about All's Fair is that it doesn't really want you to be lukewarm. It dares you to love it, dares you to hate it, and then—almost cheekily—keeps winning the one argument that matters in streaming: people actually watched.
That's why, as February 2026 ticks on, the question isn't whether Hulu will bring Kim Kardashian back to court. It's when. Season two is coming; the uncertainty is simply how long viewers will be left staring at an empty docket.
Hulu renewed All's Fair for a second season on 24 November 2025, with Deadline reporting the pickup came ahead of the season one finale. The renewal landed despite a critical kicking, because the numbers were hard to ignore: Disney said the show pulled 3.2 million views worldwide in its first three days, making it Hulu's most-watched scripted series debut in three years. Deadline also cited Luminate data showing the series ranked 15th in the US during premiere week (2.61 million hours viewed, 31 October–6 November) and then climbed to 13th the following week (3.85 million hours watched, 7–13 November).
Yet the show's polarising reception is exactly why season two has to be handled carefully. All's Fair isn't a gentle prestige drama that can coast on goodwill. It's high-gloss, high-volume, and—depending on your tolerance—either deliciously camp or deeply irritating. The fact it inspired both a fan following and widespread derision is not a bug; it's the product.
All's Fair Season 2 Release Date: What Hulu Has (And Hasn't) Said
There is no official premiere date for season two. What Hulu and the show's team have confirmed so far is the more practical detail: production is scheduled to begin in spring 2026. That alone should temper anyone expecting a quick return, because filming is only the start; post-production, scheduling, and Hulu's own release strategy can stretch a 'simple' timetable into something far less tidy.
Could it be back by the end of 2026? In theory, yes. But there's a reason even optimistic forecasts tend to come with a shrug: streamers love the luxury of going at their own pace, especially with a show that already proved it can ignite headlines. The chatter will keep the brand alive; the episodes can wait.
It's also worth remembering how season one arrived, because it hints at how Hulu likes to 'stage' this show. Variety reported that All's Fair premiered on 4 November 2025 with three episodes available immediately. After that, episodes rolled out weekly, keeping the series in the conversation rather than letting it evaporate after a weekend binge. (Note: some outlets have reported different weekly drop days; Hulu's own ongoing strategy is clearer than any single fan calendar.)
All's Fair Season 2 Cast And Spoilers: Who's Likely Back
Hulu hasn't released an official season two cast list. But the series is built around its marquee names, and the renewal announcement itself leaned heavily on the ensemble.
Kim Kardashian leads as Allura Grant, with Naomi Watts as Liberty Ronson, Niecy Nash-Betts as Emerald Greene, Teyana Taylor as Milan, Sarah Paulson as Carrington Lane and Glenn Close as Dina Standish. Those aren't supporting players you swap out quietly; they're the engine of the show's appeal, both for fans who enjoy the heightened drama and for viewers who tune in partly to see whether the whole thing is as outrageous as the internet claims.
And for anyone who missed the premise beneath the noise: All's Fair follows a group of female divorce attorneys who leave a male-dominated firm to open their own practice, with the series pitched around messy break-ups, rivalries and the private detonations that follow public marriages. That setup matters because it gives season two an easy runway—new clients, bigger reputations, more grudges—without the show having to reinvent itself.
As for 'spoilers', the truth is there aren't any concrete ones—at least none from Hulu. The renewal coverage has sketched the show's core tensions instead: a female-led divorce law firm, betrayals, changing loyalties, and Paulson's Carrington Lane as a key rival presence. If season one's hook was the collision between glossy celebrity casting and sharp-edged legal melodrama, season two's job is simpler and harder at once: keep the chaos, but make it feel less like a stunt.
Because All's Fair has already cleared the most brutal hurdle in modern television: it got watched. Now it has to do the second-hardest thing—come back with something more than noise.
© Copyright IBTimes 2025. All rights reserved.




















