⚠️ OLD MONEY SEASON 2 LEAKED PLOT TWIST JUST ENDED MY LIFE 😱
Insiders who’ve seen the first four episodes say there’s ONE massive secret coming that will:
Destroy Osman’s entire empire in 60 seconds
Make Nihal wish she NEVER left Istanbul
Turn the person we trusted the most into the ultimate villain
One source literally said: “When this drops, fans will riot like the Succession finale on steroids.”
I’m not emotionally prepared. Are YOU? Full leaked details (no major spoilers but CLOSE) in the link – read at your own risk 👇

Hold onto your Birkins, because Old Money Season 2 hasn’t even started filming yet and it’s already spiraling into chaos.
Multiple sources who claim to have read the first four episode scripts (or in one case, allegedly watched a secret table read) are spilling details about a single mid-season twist so explosive that production executives are reportedly in full panic mode trying to plug the leak before it hits Turkish gossip sites.
What we know so far is devastating.
According to three separate insiders speaking on condition of anonymity (one production assistant, one agency source close to the lead cast, and one journalist who says they were slipped 40 pages of script notes), the entire backbone of Osman Bulut’s empire—and everything we thought we knew about his love story with Nihal—is built on a lie so catastrophic that when it’s revealed in Episode 4 or 5, “viewers will need therapy.”
The twist allegedly centers on the night Osman’s father supposedly died 25 years ago.
Season 1 heavily implied the senior Bulut’s death was a heart attack brought on by stress after a hostile takeover went wrong. Osman used that tragedy as rocket fuel—vowing to turn the family from broke nobodies into Istanbul’s most feared new-money dynasty.
But the leak claims it wasn’t a heart attack at all.
Sources say Episode 4 will flash back to that fateful night and reveal—through security footage recovered from an old hard drive—that the elder Bulut was pushed down the marble staircase of the family’s old (much smaller) mansion. The hand on his back? A woman wearing the exact same distinctive emerald ring we’ve seen multiple times on one major character this season.
Yes. The implication is murder. And the murderer has been hiding in plain sight the entire time.
Turkish drama forums are already exploding with theories, but the leading one is gut-wrenching: Songül Bulut (Dolunay Soysert), Osman’s fiercely protective mother, allegedly killed her own husband to collect a massive life-insurance payout that funded Osman’s first big real-estate flip—the one that started everything.
One source told a private Telegram group: “Songül didn’t just cover it up. She framed a random business rival who conveniently died in prison years later. Osman has zero idea. When he finds out, the man who threw mansion keys into the sea rather than live without Nihal will wish he’d jumped in after them.”
Another bombshell allegedly tied to the same twist: the reason Songül was so dead-set against Osman marrying into the Baydemir family wasn’t snobbery. It was because the Baydemirs’ late patriarch had started digging into the old Bulut death right before he himself died in that suspicious boating accident. Songül apparently feared a marriage would give Nihal access to old files that could expose everything.
If true, this reframes the entire series. Osman isn’t just a ruthless self-made man. He’s the unwitting heir to blood money—built on a murder his own mother committed and then used him as the perfect “rags-to-riches” poster boy to hide behind.
Nihal’s role in the reveal is reportedly brutal. Insiders say she stumbles across evidence while helping liquidate some remaining Baydemir assets in Istanbul. The moment she realizes the man she loved was unknowingly living off her family’s destruction—and that Songül may have had a hand in her own parents’ deaths—she collapses in tears on the floor of the old Baydemir library.
One leaked line that’s circulating in DMs: Nihal on the phone to Osman, voice shaking: “You didn’t just buy our house, Osman. You bought it with my father’s silence.”
Production sources claim showrunner Meriç Acemi has been telling cast members this twist was “always the endgame” and that Season 1’s love story was deliberately designed to make viewers root for Osman so the betrayal hits harder. “We wanted you to fall in love with a monster who doesn’t even know he’s a monster,” one insider quotes her saying.
Netflix and the production company (Ay Yapım) have gone radio silent, but damage control is allegedly in full swing. Cast members have reportedly been asked to sign new NDAs specifically mentioning “the staircase incident,” and security on script distribution has been tripled.
Engin Akyürek and Aslı Enver have both stayed off social media since the leaks started circulating Wednesday night. Dolunay Soysert, however, posted (and quickly deleted) an Instagram story of herself sipping red wine with the caption “Some secrets age better than others 🍷” before taking it down 11 minutes later. The screenshot has already been shared 87,000 times.
Turkish tabloids are feasting. One outlet ran the headline “ANNE KATİL ÇIKTI?” (Did the mother turn out to be the killer?) with a giant red arrow pointing at Soysert’s face. Another claims the twist was partially inspired by a real-life Istanbul dynasty scandal from the early 2000s that still can’t be reported on openly because of ongoing lawsuits.
Fans are split down the middle. Half are screaming “genius writing,” while the other half are threatening to boycott if the show “ruins Osman forever.” #SaveOsman and #SongulDeservesPrison are both trending simultaneously in Turkey.
Netflix still hasn’t announced an official premiere date—rumors say late 2026—but test audiences who saw early cuts of Episode 1 reportedly gave the highest scores in the streamer’s Turkish slate history, with multiple people citing “the big reveal setup” as the reason they binge-watched the provided episodes twice in one sitting.
Whatever the truth behind these leaks, one thing is undeniable: Old Money is no longer just another rich-people-fall-in-love show. It’s morphing into a full-blown Turkish Succession with Bosphorus views, family murders, and the kind of betrayal that makes the Red Wedding look like a disagreement over brunch.
If even half of this is real, Season 2 won’t just break the internet.
It’ll break every single one of us who ever rooted for Osman Bulut.