đ¨ HEARTSTOPPER FOREVER TRAILER JUST ENDED US: Nick and Charlie are no longer teenagers hiding in school corridors⌠theyâre adults facing the real world, and the first full look at their future is absolutely devastating in the best way. đłď¸âđđ
University goodbyes. Long-distance fights at 2 a.m. A mental health relapse that breaks the fandomâs heart in half.
Charlieâs first therapy session on-screen. Nickâs rugby teammates discovering the truth. One phone call that has everyone screaming âDONâT HANG UPâ.
And then⌠that final 10-second shot of them on a bridge at sunrise with the words âSome love stories donât end â they just grow up.â
The tears are already flowing and the season doesnât drop until 2026. Click if youâre emotionally ready (youâre not). đ

Netflix shattered the internet at 3 p.m. GMT today when it unleashed the first full trailer for Heartstopper Forever, the fourth and final season of Alice Osemanâs groundbreaking queer coming-of-age masterpiece. Clocking in at 2 minutes and 41 seconds of pure, unfiltered emotion, the trailerânarrated by alternating voiceovers from Charlie Spring (Joe Locke) and Nick Nelson (Kit Connor)âmakes one thing brutally clear: this is no longer the soft, golden story of two boys falling in love at Truham Grammar. This is the story of what happens after the leaves fall.
The footage opens with the familiar animated leaves swirling across the screen, but theyâre no longer pastel pinks and oranges. Theyâre deep autumn reds, crumbling at the edges. Charlieâs voice, older and steadier than weâve ever heard it, begins: âWe thought love would fix everything.â Cut to Nick boarding a train at Leeds station, rugby bag slung over one shoulder, turning back for one last look at Charlie on the platform. The distance between them has never felt wider.
Season 4, adapting the final volume of Osemanâs graphic novels plus brand-new epilogue material written exclusively for the screen, leaps forward to 2019â2020. Nick is in his first year at the University of Leeds on a sports scholarship; Charlie is finishing sixth form in Kent while battling fresh waves of OCD and depression triggered by the separation. The trailer doesnât flinch: we see Charlie curled on a bathroom floor at 3 a.m., phone clutched to his chest after another missed call; Nick sitting alone in his dorm as teammates chant outside his door, too scared to come out to the rugby lads; Tori Spring (Jenny Walser) literally dragging her brother to his first proper therapy session with Geoff (now played by guest star Jonathan Bailey in a beautiful full-circle cameo).
âGrowing up is learning that love isnât the finish line,â Nickâs voice cracks over shots of the couple screaming at each other over FaceTime, Charlie shouting, âYou said youâd always choose me!â and Nick hurling back, âIâm trying, but Iâm drowning here too!â The fandom has already dubbed it âthe 1:38 fightâ and itâs trending worldwide within an hour of the drop.
Yet the trailer refuses to stay in the dark. At the 1:50 mark the music shiftsâthose familiar piano chords from âForeverâ by Joseph Vincentâand we get the moments that break you in the opposite direction:
Nick finally coming out to his rugby team in the locker room, met with stunned silence⌠then the captain starting a slow clap that turns into cheers.
Charlie publishing his first semi-autobiographical comic online and waking up to thousands of messages from queer teens saying he saved them.
Tao (William Gao) and Elle (Yasmin Finney) moving in together in London, Elleâs art finally getting a gallery show.
Isaac (Tobie Donovan) discovering heâs aromantic and owning it with quiet, radiant pride.
And the gut-punch finale: Nick and Charlie, now 21 and 20, standing on the same bridge from Season 1 where they first held hands. Nick pulls out a tiny boxânot a ring, but a key. âI got us a flat in Leeds,â he whispers. âCome be my forever.â
Oseman, who wrote and executive-produced every episode, told press at a virtual junket moments after the trailer premiered: âSeason 4 isnât a goodbye to Nick and Charlie. Itâs a hello to the rest of their lives. We always promised this story would be honest, and honesty includes the terrifying, messy, beautiful reality of loving someone when the world gets bigger than school corridors.â
The adult cast is staggering. Alongside Baileyâs Geoff, we get:
Oscar winner Olivia Colman returning as Sarah Nelson for three pivotal episodes.
Oscar nominee Andrew Scott as Charlieâs new university therapist in flash-forwards.
Cameos from real-life queer icons Russell Tovey and Layton Williams as Nickâs older rugby mentors.
Filming wrapped in Margate and Leeds in September 2025, with director Euros Lyn using the same 16mm lenses from Season 1 to keep that intimate, diary-like feel even as the characters age up. The colour palette has shifted from candy pastels to muted golds and greys, reflecting the transition from adolescence to early adulthood.
Social media is a flood. #HeartstopperForever has generated 6.8 million posts in six hours. TikTok is already drowning in edits set to Noah Kahanâs âYouâre Gonna Go Farâ and Lizzy McAlpineâs âCeilings.â The final shot of Nick and Charlie on the bridge has been slowed down, reversed, and sobbed over in approximately 400,000 videos and counting.
Netflix has confirmed all eight episodes drop simultaneously on March 27, 2026âno weekly torture this time. Early projections have it shattering Season 3âs 78 million first-month views. As Charlieâs closing voiceover says over the sunrise: âWe were never just a high-school love story. We were the beginning of something that doesnât end.â
Get the tissues ready. Heartstopper isnât leaving us. Itâs growing up with us.