If you’ve been watching Undekhi since the beginning, you already know what this show does to you. The Atwal family, their crime empire in Manali, and DCP Ghosh chasing justice from every possible angle — it’s been one of the most consistently gripping Indian crime dramas on streaming.
Season 4 is the final one. SonyLIV is calling it “The Final Battle,” and from the setup that Season 3 left behind, that description feels accurate. Everything has been building toward this.
It premieres on May 1, 2026, with new episodes dropping weekly rather than all at once. Which means this is going to be a slow burn of weekly suspense rather than a single weekend binge — and honestly, for a show that thrives on tension, that format might suit it perfectly.
What Season 4 Is Actually About
The Atwal family empire is cracking. The conflicts that have been building across three seasons are heading toward the kind of confrontation where not everyone makes it out on the other side.
The central tension this season sits between Rinku and Papaji — the generational power struggle that’s been simmering beneath the surface of every major event in the show. Season 4 is where that particular fire stops being contained.
Meanwhile, DCP Ghosh isn’t stopping. Three seasons of relentless investigation haven’t broken him, and Season 4 is positioned as the season where his pursuit of the Atwals either pays off or costs him everything. His arc has always been the moral spine of the show — a man trying to bring accountability to a world that has systematically avoided it — and the final season should deliver some kind of reckoning on that front.
Expect alliances to fracture, loyalties to be tested in ways that reveal exactly who these characters really are when survival is on the line, and the kind of betrayals that Undekhi has always been comfortable delivering.

The Cast — Everyone Is Back
The core ensemble that made the previous seasons work are all returning.
Dibyendu Bhattacharya as DCP Ghosh — still the most compelling thing on screen every time he appears. His intensity never reads as performance; it reads as character, which is the hardest thing to achieve consistently.
Harsh Chhaya as Papaji — the patriarch whose hold over the family has always been more complicated than simple authority. His scenes in Season 3 suggested a man who knows his world is changing even if he refuses to acknowledge it publicly.
Surya Sharma as Rinku — the one whose unpredictability has driven the tension in so many key moments. Rinku has always been the loose variable in the Atwal equation, and Season 4 being “The Final Battle” suggests that variable is about to become impossible to control.
Maya Alagh and other key returning cast members round out the ensemble, ensuring the story doesn’t lose any of its established threads.
The New Face — Gautam Rode
Season 4 brings in Gautam Rode as a new character, and his role is being kept deliberately vague in promotional material, which is usually a sign that the writers intend to use him as a genuine surprise element rather than just additional background.
The interesting question is where he sits in the power dynamics. Does he come in on the Atwal side, complicating Rinku’s and Papaji’s already strained relationship further? Does he represent an external threat to the family? Or is he somehow connected to Ghosh’s investigation?
Not knowing keeps the first few episodes unpredictable, which is exactly what a final season needs to maintain the element of surprise.
Format and How to Watch
Weekly episodes, each running roughly 30 to 35 minutes, will drop on SonyLIV from May 1.
The weekly format is an interesting choice that deserves some thought. Binge releases have become the default for Indian streaming, but there’s an argument that Undekhi’s style — dense, layered, with lots of small details that pay off later — actually works better when you have a week between episodes to think about what you just watched.
You’ll need a SonyLIV subscription. The platform works across phones, smart TVs, and laptops, so access isn’t complicated.
Also Read: Sitaare Zameen Par OTT Release: Aamir Khan Film Set to Stream Soon on SonyLIV
What Has Made Undekhi Worth Following
For anyone who hasn’t watched the series and is considering starting from Season 1 before May — here’s why it’s worth the investment.
Undekhi doesn’t glamorize its criminals or soften its world to make it more palatable. The Atwals are genuinely frightening because they’re recognizable—people with real power operating in a system that has consistently failed to hold them accountable. The show understands that corruption isn’t dramatic in the obvious way; it’s structural and quiet, which makes it more disturbing.
The performances carry a lot of this weight. Dibyendu Bhattacharya, Harsh Chhaya, Surya Sharma — this isn’t a show coasting on production values or stylish cinematography. It earns its tension through character work and writing.
Three seasons in, the accumulation of that character work is significant. Season 4 has a lot of material to draw on.
What to Expect From the Finale
The honest expectation for Season 4 is that it will be emotionally demanding and probably not entirely comfortable to watch — which is exactly what a show like this should be going into its final chapter.
The best crime dramas don’t wrap up neatly. They give you a resolution that feels earned rather than tidy. Whether Ghosh gets the justice he’s been chasing, whether the Atwals face real consequences, whether the characters who’ve carried moral weight through three seasons end up where their choices have been pointing — these are the questions that make the final season worth watching.
There will be betrayals. There will be confrontations. There will be at least one moment that makes you put your phone down and just stare at the screen.
That’s been Undekhi’s promise across every season. Season 4 just needs to deliver it one more time.


