After a two-year wait, Westeros is finally going back to war. House of the Dragon Season 3 premieres on Sunday, June 21, 2026, at 9 PM ET on HBO, with the season also streaming on HBO Max.
New episodes will roll out weekly, building toward a finale on August 9.
It’s an eight-episode season, the same length as Season 2, and by every indication, it’s about to deliver everything the previous season spent its entire runtime setting up.
When and Where to Watch
The premiere airs June 21 at 9 PM Eastern, with new episodes dropping every Sunday in the US and early Monday morning for UK viewers. The show streams on HBO Max globally, and for audiences in India, the season continues to be available on JioHotstar.
The Cast Returning to Westeros
The core ensemble that has carried the show across its first two seasons is back. Emma D’Arcy returns as Queen Rhaenyra Targaryen, with Matt Smith once again playing Prince Daemon Targaryen. Olivia Cooke is back as Alicent Hightower, alongside Tom Glynn-Carney as King Aegon II and Ewan Mitchell as the increasingly dangerous Prince Aemond Targaryen.
The rest of the ensemble returns too — Rhys Ifans as Otto Hightower, Steve Toussaint as Lord Corlys Velaryon, Fabien Frankel as Ser Criston Cole, Harry Collett as Jace Velaryon, and Sonoya Mizuno as Mysaria. Cast members speaking about the season have described the scale of production as genuinely enormous, with massive battle sequences and meticulously detailed costume and armor work shaping how each of them approached their roles this time around.
A notable new addition is James Norton, who joins as Ormund Hightower, expanding the Green faction’s military presence as the war intensifies.

Behind the Camera
Ryan Condal returns as the sole showrunner for Season 3, continuing the role he’s held since the series began. The season is based on George R. R. Martin’s prequel novel Fire & Blood, though Martin’s actual involvement in the writing process has reportedly grown more distant — he’s spoken publicly about creative disagreements with Condal over how the adaptation has handled certain story decisions.
Filming took place between March and October 2025 across multiple locations in the UK and Spain, including Leavesden Studios, the Welsh countryside, and the historic town of Cáceres.
Quick Recap of Season 1 and 2
If you need a refresher before diving back in, here’s where things stood.
Season 1 set the entire conflict in motion. King Viserys I named his daughter Rhaenyra as his heir, breaking centuries of tradition that favoured male succession. Otto Hightower pushed back, manoeuvring to put his grandson Aegon on the throne instead. When Viserys died, Otto sealed the gates of King’s Landing and crowned Aegon II. Rhaenyra and Daemon fled with their family, and the stage was set for the Dance of the Dragons — a brutal civil war between the Blacks, loyal to Rhaenyra, and the Greens, loyal to Aegon.
Season 2 escalated everything. Both sides built their forces and prepared for outright war, with dragons beginning to die in battle and alliances shifting under pressure. The season ended with both factions fully committed to war, gearing up for what’s been teased as the Battle of the Gullet — one of the bloodiest naval conflicts in Westeros’s history.
What’s Coming in Season 3
This is where the show goes all in. Showrunner Ryan Condal has promised some of the most ambitious battle sequences the series has ever attempted, including the long-awaited Battle of the Gullet right at the start of the season. Expect Rhaenyra to gain crucial reinforcements as Cregan Stark’s Winter Wolves march south to join her cause. At the same time, Aemond’s increasingly reckless choices threaten to drag the entire realm deeper into chaos.
King Aegon II’s escape also becomes a major plot thread, turning him into one of the most hunted men in Westeros and setting off a chase that could reshape the balance of the war entirely.
It’s worth noting this won’t be the final chapter. House of the Dragon has already been renewed for a fourth season, meaning Season 3 is the penultimate chapter rather than the conclusion — though it’s expected to resolve much of the central conflict that’s been building since the first episode.
Also Read: Will There Be Euphoria Season 4? Sam Levinson and HBO Confirm the Show Has Ended
Two seasons of political manoeuvring, broken alliances, and dragons circling each other from a distance are finally giving way to the war everyone has been waiting for. With a reliable creative team, an outstanding returning cast, and a showrunner promising the most technically demanding season yet, House of the Dragon Season 3 has the ingredients to be the most intense chapter the series has produced so far. Mark your calendar for June 21. The throne knows no mercy, and this season looks ready to prove it.

