"Stranger Things" season five will be the hit Netflix series' last.
The Duffer brothers have teased information about the final season since season four was released in 2022.
In July, Netflix confirmed that the season was halfway done with filming.
Since premiering in 2016, "Stranger Things" has gone on to become one of Netflix's most popular series of all time.
The supernatural drama, set in the fictional town of Hawkins, Indiana, in the 1980s, is now headed into its fifth and final season. Its stellar young cast, long one of the show's biggest strengths, are now adults. Leading actor Millie Bobby Brown's breakout role as Eleven has led to her becoming a star in her own right, producing films like "Enola Holmes" and pursuing other projects outside the "Stranger Things" umbrella.
Netflix announced in February 2022 that the show's fifth season would be its last, bringing a conclusion to the story of Eleven, Hawkins, and the Upside Down. And while there are plenty of "Stranger Things" spinoff projects in the pipeline (and other shows to catch up on in the meantime), it's hard not to be excited about what's sure to be an epic ending.
Here's everything we know about season five of the series, including what the Duffers have said about the show's conclusion.
"Stranger Things" season five kicked off production in January 2024.
On January 8, 2024, the official "Stranger Things" account posted on X that the show had entered production.
"THIS IS A CODE RED," the post read. "STRANGER THINGS 5 production has officially begun!!!"
The post featured a photo of the Duffers and the show's cast lounging together next to a red, neon "5" sign.
By July 2024, season five was halfway done filming.
Netflix released a behind-the-scenes featurette from the set of "Stranger Things" season five in July, marking the halfway point of filming for the final season.
The video is full of creepy tendrils, shots of Hawkins High School, and plenty of nostalgic callbacks to the show's early seasons.
"I started when I was 10," Millie Bobby Brown says in one clip. "Now I'm turning 20 years old. It feels very weird."
The teaser also features appearances from members of the primary cast including Brown, Finn Wolfhard, Caleb McLaughlin, Sadie Sink, Gaten Matarazzo, Joe Keery, Maya Hawke, Natalia Dyer, Charlie Heaton, Noah Schnapp, Jamie Campbell Bower, and Winona Ryder. Season five newcomer Linda Hamilton of "Terminator" fame also briefly gets the spotlight.
There are some fun glimpses in the trailer of Dustin wearing a Hellfire Club shirt (RIP Eddie) and the original four — Mike, Dustin, Lucas, and Will — attending school together. There's also a brief shot of Hawke and Ryder sharing a scene, and one glimpse of Mike's younger sister Holly looking shocked by something off-screen.
The trailer, however, did not contain a release date.
Production on the final season was meant to start sooner. It was put on hold until the end of the writers' strike.
In a May 6, 2023 tweet from the writers' room Twitter account, the Duffer brothers announced that production was on pause until the writers' strike had ended and the Writers Guild of America and Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers had reached a "fair deal."
"Duffers here. Writing does not stop when filming begins," the tweet began. "While we're excited to start production with our amazing cast and crew, it is not possible during this strike. We hope a fair deal is reached soon so we can all get back to work. Until then -- over and out. #wgastrong."
The issues at hand for writers include stagnating wages, practices like "mini rooms," and the threat that AI could replace writers, Insider previously reported.
Work on the scripts for season five started back in August 2022.
The Duffer brothers told Collider in July 2022 that after some time off that month following the release of season four, part two, they were planning on starting up the writers' room for season five of the series during the first week of August.
Before the strike, the time between the "Stranger Things" season five release date and season four's premiere wasn't expected to be as long as the wait between seasons four and three.
The Duffer Brothers told Variety in May 2022 that the time between seasons "should be quite a bit shorter this time," given that their COVID-induced filming hiatus gave them time to outline season five. At the time, the Duffers said they "can't imagine there will be another six-month forced hiatus." Well. Oops.
Ahead of the dual writers' and actors' strikes, star Finn Wolfhard told GQ that he'd be 22 when the final season debuted on Netflix, suggesting that "Stranger Things" season five would be released in early 2025. Because of the production delay, many are speculating that the release might be pushed to late 2025 or even 2026. (Netflix hasn't addressed release date rumors.)
For context, there was a nearly three-year wait between seasons three and four. Season three premiered on July 4, 2019, and the first part of the fourth season was released on May 27, 2022.
Season five will be shorter — except for its finale. Probably.
"I don't know if it's gonna be going 100 miles per hour at the start of five, but it's gonna be moving pretty fast," Matt Duffer said. "Characters are already gonna be in action, they're already gonna have a goal and drive, and I think that's gonna carve out at least a couple hours and make this season feel really different.
Ross Duffer said, however, that they're likely to have another "two-and-a-half-hour episode" for the series finale, in order to avoid a television phenomenon in which the series' final episode falls after the climax, and serves as a "wind down."
Still, the brothers said that during the writing process, things could turn out differently length-wise.
"We hope that you stay with us as we finish this tale of a powerful girl named Eleven and her brave friends, of a broken police chief and a ferocious mom, of a small town called Hawkins and an alternate dimension known only as the Upside Down," the brothers said in a letter.
The brothers "feel good" about the "Stranger Things" ending, which they've already planned out.
"We do feel good about the ending," Matt Duffer said. "I was like, okay, I think this ending is not… I'm not super insecure. I'm insecure about a lot of things, but I feel like this ending feels good."
Ross Duffer told the publication that the final 20 minutes of the series were "locked in."
The Duffer brothers aren't trying to engineer another "Running Up That Hill" moment in season five.
"The fact that she's in a coma, I can't really get into the details, but it is important that she is," Matt Duffer said. "That is gonna have a major effect on five. So it's not a, oh well, you know, a cheat. It's incredibly relevant to five."
Season five will explain more about the Upside Down.
Russ Duffer told Netflix Geeked that lingering questions about the Upside Down, such as why it's frozen in time to the point where Will was taken in season one, will be answered in season five.
"The answers to what the Upside Down actually is, is really gonna be the core of what season five is, and the mysteries of season five," Ross said. "And those answers are really gonna lead us to the conclusion of this story."
The fifth season will mostly take place in Hawkins, where it all started.
The Duffer brothers told Collider that the fifth season will take place mostly in Hawkins, Indiana, as well as the Upside Down. That's a direct contrast to season four, which saw the cast scattered between Indiana, California, and Russia.
"This is about everyone finally coming back. Coming back together, coming back to Hawkins," Matt Duffer said. "Hopper is back in Hawkins. The original group [is] back together — the original group of boys plus Eleven. The OG group. There's something interesting to re-explore some of the season one dynamics again, except on this grander scale."
The end of the story was apparently emotional enough to make Netflix executives cry.
Ross Duffer told The Wrap that when he and Matt pitched season five to Netflix, it led to some tears being shed in the room.
"I mean, it was hard. It's the end of the story," he told the publication. "I saw executives crying who I've never seen cry before and it was wild. And it's not just to do with the story, just the fact that it's like, 'Oh my God, this thing that has defined so many of our lives, these Netflix people who has been with us from the beginning, seven years now,' and it's hard to imagine the journey coming to an end."
Eddie's death will have ramifications in season five.
On the "Happy Sad Confused" podcast, Matt Duffer said that all the deaths on the show have ramifications on the series.
Will Byers is going to be a "big focus" of season five.
Matt Duffer told Collider that Will, played by Noah Schnapp, is going to play a large part in season five.
"Will's going to be a big part and focus, is really all I can say of season five, in his journey. We're starting to see his coming of age, really," Matt told the publication. "Which has been challenging for a number of reasons, some of which are supernatural. But you're starting to see him come into his own."