There will be another season of HBO Max's Harry Potter television series, even as the project has officially gone into production and is preparing to begin filming this summer. The new chapter adds another layer to a reboot that is already moving quickly from announcement to camera-ready reality.
Dominic McLaughlin will play Harry Potter, Alastair Stout will portray Ronald Weasley and Arabella Stanton will play Hermione Granger. Holly Waddington has joined as costume designer, Laura Neal is in the writers room, Francesca Gardiner won the showrunner job, and Mark Mylod will direct multiple episodes and executive produce.
The update matters because the series is no longer just a long-range plan. Warner Bros. Discovery first confirmed a television adaptation of all seven Harry Potter books at its Max streaming event in April 2023, then moved the project to HBO on June 25. Casey Bloys said the new Max Original series would dive deep into each of the iconic books and called it a faithful adaptation, with the company also saying it would run for 10 consecutive years.
That ambition has not been without friction. Early reports suggested each season would focus on one book, but Bloys' timeline points to a far longer rollout, and Warner Bros. Discovery has said Fantastic Beasts will not be part of the series. Chris Columbus, meanwhile, has called the reboot a spectacular idea, a vote of confidence that sits alongside a production schedule now headed toward its first filming window.
For viewers, the message is simple: the Harry Potter TV universe is not a one-season experiment. With a cast in place, key creative hires locked and Season 2 already part of the plan, Warner Bros. Discovery is betting this will be a decade-long television franchise rather than a single nostalgic retelling.





