The Moment
Meghan Markle’s glossy Netflix lifestyle series, With Love, Meghan, is reportedly not coming back for a third season. Instead of more jam, crafting, and barefoot hosting tips from that rented Montecito mansion, the cameras may be packing up for good.
According to entertainment reports citing unnamed insiders, the show isn’t being renewed as a full series. There’s chatter about possible holiday specials someday, but nothing concrete. The word is that Meghan herself found the show “a lot of work” and is now focusing on her lifestyle brand, As Ever, plus a planned cookbook for 2026.
Season two only dropped last August and leaned harder into personal storytelling – including Meghan’s safari-date love story with Prince Harry – but the viewing numbers reportedly stayed underwhelming compared to her earlier Netflix work.
So on paper, it looks like this: fewer high-production Netflix episodes, more honey jars, candles, and “tips and tricks” for hosting at home.

The Take
I’m going to say the quiet part out loud: this doesn’t feel like a shock cancellation. It feels like a quiet course correction.
With Love, Meghan was sold as the next chapter of the Sussexes’ streaming reign after their huge Netflix documentary. Instead, the series landed somewhere between polished Pinterest board and expensive mood board – nice to look at, easy to forget. Reviewers called it everything from “lifestyle filler” to flat-out dull, and those reported numbers back that up.
Ranking somewhere around 383rd among Netflix titles with 5.3 million views in early 2025, while her earlier docu-series pulled tens of millions in just a few days, tells you exactly what you need to know. People are curious about Meghan the person, the marriage, the palace drama. Meghan the lifestyle guru arranging sage and honey in perfect light? That’s a harder sell.
And honestly, that’s where this pivot makes sense. Why fight for a so-so performing series when you can own the whole pie – brand, products, socials, cookbook – without sharing spotlight or profits with a giant streamer?
It’s less “struggling TV show” and more “soft launch that actually wanted to be a catalog from the start.” The recipes, the tablescapes, the jam and sage honey – they all play better as short-form content fueling a shopping cart than as 40-minute episodes buried deep in a menu.
Also worth clocking: this move gives Meghan more control and less public scorekeeping. When every engagement report and review becomes a referendum on your likability, it’s not shocking to slide toward owned platforms and products where the only numbers that really matter are sales and email signups.
Is it a comedown from “record-breaking Netflix documentary” to “maybe some holiday specials and a cookbook”? In pure fame math, yes. In long-game brand math? This might be the sanest move she’s made in years.
Receipts
Confirmed
- View counts and ranking: A Netflix engagement report for the first half of 2025, described in a January 20, 2026 British tabloid article, put With Love, Meghan at 5.3 million global views and around 383rd among all Netflix shows.
- Critical reception: The same report relayed that the show holds roughly a 23% approval rating on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes.
- Format and setting: The series features Meghan offering cooking, crafting, and entertaining tips from a rented mansion in Montecito, with guest appearances from well-known chefs (like Jose Andres, Roy Choi, and Alice Waters) and her friends, including Chrissy Teigen, Mindy Kaling, and her mother, Doria Ragland.
- Family on camera: Prince Harry appears only briefly in the first season’s final episode; their children do not appear, though they reportedly visited set. In a March 2025 interview with a U.S. celebrity magazine, Meghan said she chose not to film at the couple’s own home to protect their “safe haven.”
- Past Netflix success: Netflix’s own 2022 announcement said the documentary Harry & Meghan reached 23.4 million views in its first four days and hit the English-language Top 10 list in dozens of countries.
- Brand and product plans: The January 2026 British tabloid piece reports that Meghan is expanding her As Ever brand with more lifestyle products, particularly candles and homeware, alongside a planned adult cookbook featuring recipes from the show and her home kitchen, targeted for early 2026.
- Previous books: Meghan wrote the foreword to the 2018 charity book Together: Our Community Cookbook and published a children’s book, The Bench, in 2021.
Unverified / Reported
- No season three: Multiple entertainment reports, quoting unnamed insiders, say With Love, Meghan is “not returning as a series” on Netflix. Netflix and the Sussexes have not publicly confirmed or denied this as of the January 2026 coverage.
- Holiday specials: The same anonymous sources claim there have been “conversations” about potential holiday specials, but that nothing is currently in active development.
- Show was “a lot of work”: One unnamed insider says Meghan described producing the series as “a lot of work,” reportedly part of the reasoning for shifting focus to her lifestyle brand and socials.
- 2026 cookbook timing and product mix: Claims that the cookbook will land in early 2026, that there will be “more wine and definitely more homeware,” and that she plans to ease off biscuit and crepe kits all come from unnamed sources speaking to that same British tabloid.
Backstory (For Casual Readers)
If you haven’t been tracking every Sussex twist: Meghan Markle married Prince Harry in 2018, became Duchess of Sussex, and then the couple stepped back from full-time royal duties in 2020. Since moving to North America, they’ve built a media-and-lifestyle empire of sorts – production deals, podcasts, books, and most recently the As Ever lifestyle brand, which launched with small-batch goods like jam and honey that instantly went viral online.

Their first Netflix project, the documentary Harry & Meghan, was a genuine juggernaut, pulling in huge viewership and dominating cultural conversation. With Love, Meghan arrived later as a softer, cozier spin-off: think less “royal bombshells,” more “how to set a pretty table and talk about love stories.” Critics weren’t kind, but it built a bridge straight from Meghan’s Netflix persona to her lifestyle-shop reality.
What’s Next
Assuming the reported decision sticks, don’t expect a big dramatic “series finale.” This looks more like a fade-out while Meghan reroutes that same content into her own channels.
Here’s what to watch for:
- Official word from Netflix or Archewell: The moment someone on the record says “no season three” (or surprises us with one) will settle the speculation.
- Short-form content takeover: Insiders say we’ll see similar cooking and crafting segments on Meghan’s social feeds, “but more bite-sized.” Translation: the show’s DNA lives on as reels, not episodes.
- The 2026 cookbook: If the reported timeline holds, we’ll get a full-length adult cookbook anchored in entertaining at home, with recipes from the series and Meghan’s own kitchen – essentially With Love, Meghan in hardcover form.
- As Ever expansion: Expect more candles, homeware, and likely seasonal products that tie neatly into that cozy hosting aesthetic the show tried to sell.
- Future specials: Holiday or themed specials are the wild card. If her brand surges and there’s demand, a one-off festive episode or limited run would be an easy way to reconnect the dots between Netflix and the merch shelf.
So no, Meghan isn’t disappearing – she’s just moving the lifestyle content where it probably always wanted to live: right next to the “add to cart” button.
Your turn: Would you rather see Meghan pouring her energy into another full Netflix season, or does a cookbook-and-lifestyle-brand era feel like the better fit now?
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