Industry Season 4 Sets January Premiere Date on HBO

“The industry” is back for another financial roller coaster ride.
Season 4 of “Industry” will debut Sunday, Jan. 11, on HBO and HBO Max, HBO CEO Casey Bloys announced Thursday during a press presentation in New York for the 2026 slate. The new season will include eight episodes that will air every Sunday.
The new season of the series created by Mickey Down and Konrad Kay will begin a little over a year and three months since the season 3 finale aired at the end of September 2024.
Read the official HBO diary here: At the top of their game and living the life they decided to have as Pierpoint graduates, Harper (Myha’la) and Yasmin (Marisa Abela) are drawn into a high-stakes, globe-trotting game of cat and mouse when a flashy fintech darling bursts onto the London scene. As Yasmin evolves in her relationship with tech founder Sir Henry Muck (Kit Harington) and Harper is drawn into the orbit of enigmatic executive Whitney Halberstram (Max Minghella), their twisted friendship begins to warp and ignite under the pressure of money, power and the desire to be on top.
On Monday, the channel presented its first teaser and its first images. Watch this below:
Season 4 will welcome several new cast members to “Industry,” including Kiernan Shipka, Toheeb Jimoh, Amy James-Kelly, Jack Farthing, Kal Penn, Claire Forlani and Charlie Heaton in addition to Minghella.
Several of Season 4’s new recruits will surround new player Tender, a payment processor, with Penn playing Jay Jonah Atterbury, CEO and founder, while Minghella plays Whitney Halberstram, CFO and founder of Tender. Shipka also plays Hayley Clay, an executive assistant at Tender.
The new cast members will join returning stars Myha’la, Abela, Ken Leung, Sagar Radia, Harington and Miriam Petche. Harry Lawtey, however, left his role as Robert Spearing before season 4 in a decision that Down said was a “mutual decision” due to both scheduling conflicts and a natural conclusion for his character.
“We love Robert as a character. We love Harry as an actor. We think he’s going to go for huge things — he’s done that before,” Down told TheWrap. “And it was, I think, sort of a mutual decision that we couldn’t make it work in the time that we had, but also that we had come to the conclusion of the character. And I think Harry came to his own conclusion.”
“Industry” is created, written and produced by Down Kay. The series is a Bad Wolf production for HBO/BBC and is executive produced by Jane Tranter, Kate Crowther and Ryan Rasmussen for Bad Wolf; Kathleen McCaffrey for Little Gems; and Rebecca Ferguson for the BBC. Directors include Mickey Down & Konrad Kay, Michelle Savill and Luke Snellin.




