
Nobody Wants This fans, Kristen Bell is about to do you one better than season 2. Netflix is adding Bell’s best-known role to their platform very soon — none other than Veronica Mars. However, there’s an interesting caveat to the whole situation.
Veronica Mars will land in its new streaming home on January 14, 2026… but it’s only the first three seasons of the show that will live on Netflix. The 2014 standalone film can only be found streaming on HBO Max and the fourth and final season of the series is available to stream on Hulu. So, while you can’t stream the entire franchise on Netflix, you can catch the original three seasons there and find the rest on neighboring services.
It’s kind of a confusing setup, but it’s mostly just a logistical hangup. Streamers sign contracts for designated time periods during which they have full streaming rights to a movie or show, so it appears both the 2014 Veronica Mars movie is just still under contract with HBO Max. There’s certainly a chance that Netflix will try to acquire it once that contract concludes, but the fourth season is Hulu production, so there is a chance they’ll hold onto the project indefinitely on their platform. That said, Netflix has been known to ditch original programming years after it was added to the platform, so you never know what might happen in the future for Hulu’s Veronica Mars.
In short, eventually you may be able to watch all of Veronica Mars in one place, but today — or January 14, technically — is not that day.
Veronica Mars premiered on UPN in 2004 and ran until its cancellation in 2007, with its last season airing on The CW. The film premiered in March 2014 to a positive response — but the fourth revival season of the show five years later was quite divisive. The ending, which doesn’t exactly give Veronica the happy ending she deserves, had fans torn and it effectively put an end to the franchise as a whole. But fans can relive the glory days on Netflix next month.
Lex Briscuso is a film and television critic and a freelance entertainment writer for IGN. You can follow her on Twitter at @nikonamerica.





