Season 4 Premiere Date Unveiled, Roy Kids Plot Against Logan in First Tease

Season 4 of Succession will premiere on Sunday, March 26, HBO announced.
The cabler also released the first teaser for the new season, in which the Roy kids plot against Logan (Brian Cox) as the sale of Waystar Royco to tech entrepreneur Lukas Matsson (Alexander Skarsgård) moves closer, causing family division and a struggle for power.
“It’s a tightrope walk on a straight razor… 500-foot reputational drop,” says Kendall (Jeremy Strong) in the teaser.
Also in the teaser, Connor (Alan Ruck) and Willa (Justine Lupe) tie the knot, and Tom (Matthew Macfadyen) settles into Logan’s inner circle.
Newly announced cast for Season 4 includes Annabeth Gish, Adam Godley, Eili Harboe, and Jóhannes Haukur Jóhannesson.
The final shot of the season, which aired on HBO on Dec. 12, 2021, was Shiv appearing to realize that her husband Tom had warned Logan they were coming, double-crossing her. The finale of the Jesse Armstrong-created series, titled “All the Bells Say,” indicated that the Roy kids were finally united against their father — which is exactly what Kendall had proposed all along.
One thing not included in today’s announcement was anything about whether the upcoming fourth season will be the last of “Succession.”
On the morning after Season 3 finale, Armstron wasn’t sure how much longer the show would continue. When asked specifically how Logan blowing up the company changed the very nature of the show, Armstrong said: “It changes it. I’d be bullshitting you if I told you I knew exactly what was going to happen. We’ll follow the truth, and the business of that. I think succession in one form or another is very much still on the table.”
Fans of the show will have to wait longer to learn whether this will be its final season, and those ardent viewers include Emmy voters.
Over three seasons, Succession has earned 48 Emmy nominations, and has won 13 (including two prizes for best drama).
Last year for its third season, it won the top prize, as well as a writing Emmy for Armstrong for “All the Bells Say” and supporting actor for Macfadyen.