Landman Season 3 Confirmed: Insights, Cast, and Ratings Behind the Renewal

Paramount+ has officially renewed Landman for a third season, and the timing is not accidental.

The streamer made the decision public on Friday, December 5, 2025, less than three weeks after Season 2 debuted. According to coverage of the announcement, the renewal is a direct response to record‑setting viewership for the new season’s first episode. That early performance pushed Landman from breakout hit to full‑fledged flagship, and it convinced Paramount+ to lock in another year.

For fans, that means Tommy Norris and the West Texas oil patch are not going anywhere yet.

How Season 2’s Numbers Secured a Third Season

Season 2 premiered on Sunday, November 16, 2025, on Paramount+. Within 48 hours, it had already rewritten the service’s internal record book.

Entertainment outlets, citing Paramount’s data, report that the Season 2 premiere drew 9.2 million views in its first two days on the platform. That opening made it the biggest season or series premiere in Paramount+ history. It was not a modest bump either. Coverage notes that the episode delivered more than double, and in some accounts roughly 262 percent of, the Season 1 premiere audience.

Those numbers did not exist in isolation. Preliminary Nielsen streaming rankings cited in reports placed Landman among the Top 3 original series across all platforms during the week of November 17. The show then climbed into the Top 2 original titles the following week. By early December, the case for a swift renewal was straightforward: the new season was growing the audience fast.

Paramount’s December 5 announcement framed the Season 3 pickup as a response to those “record‑setting numbers” for Season 2’s launch. In other words, viewers essentially voted Season 3 into existence with their watch time.

From New Series to Paramount+ Flagship

The Season 2 surge built on a strong foundation laid the previous year.

Landman debuted on November 17, 2024, with a two‑episode premiere on Paramount+. A performance summary later cited in industry coverage put the first episode’s global streaming viewership at roughly 35 million. At the time, Paramount+ labeled Landman its No. 1 original series ever on the service, and its top driver of engagement and household reach.

Nielsen data for the final quarter of 2024 backed up that positioning. Trade reports noted that Landman ranked among the Top 10 subscription streaming original series across all services in that period. It appeared in lists alongside other Taylor Sheridan projects such as Tulsa King and Special Ops: Lioness, reinforcing Sheridan’s role as a cornerstone creator for the platform.

Executives moved quickly even then. Before Season 1 had fully wrapped, Paramount ordered Season 2, and Chris McCarthy, President and CEO of Showtime/MTV Entertainment Studios and Paramount Media Networks, publicly called Landman “one of the biggest shows of the year.” When Season 2 then launched and broke the service’s premiere records, Season 3 became less of a gamble and more of a logical next step.

Where the Series Stands Right Now

The Season 3 announcement arrives while Season 2 is still unfolding on a weekly schedule.

Season 1 ran for 10 episodes, airing Sundays on Paramount+ from November 17, 2024, through January 12, 2025. Season 2 follows the same basic structure. It also consists of 10 episodes, with new installments dropping Sundays at 3:00 a.m. Eastern on the streaming service.

Streaming guides list Season 2, Episode 4 (“Dancing Rainbows”) as arriving on Sunday, December 7, 2025, at that 3:00 a.m. Eastern time. Esquire and other outlets report that the Season 2 finale is scheduled for January 18, 2026. That places the renewal squarely in the middle of the season, not at its conclusion.

So, as of early December 2025, fans are celebrating two things at once. First, they still have several Season 2 episodes left to watch. Second, they now know that however this season’s finale lands, there will be at least one more chapter to follow.

What Landman Is About, and Why It Resonates

Part of the show’s momentum comes from its clear identity and grounded source material.

Landman was co‑created by Taylor Sheridan and journalist Christian Wallace. The series is based on Wallace’s “Boomtown” podcast, an 11‑part non‑fiction series from Imperative Entertainment and Texas Monthly that examined the recent oil boom in the Permian Basin. The TV adaptation keeps that focus on the interface between everyday workers, high‑risk deals, and huge money.

On screen, the story centers on Tommy Norris, played by Billy Bob Thornton. Tommy works as a landman and fixer in West Texas, dealing with lease negotiations, industrial accidents, corporate wars, and his own family’s fractures. The series portrays the modern oil boom as something reshaping climate, economy, and geopolitics, echoing themes from the podcast.

Although the narrative is set around the oilfields and boomtowns of West Texas, filming takes place primarily in North Texas, including Tarrant County and Parker County, according to regional coverage. Production is handled by MTV Entertainment Studios, 101 Studios, and Sheridan’s Bosque Ranch Productions.

The combination of authentic locations, a real‑world foundation, and a familiar Sheridan approach to regional storytelling has clearly found an audience, both in Texas and far beyond.

Star Power, Awards Attention, and an Expanding Ensemble

Cast and industry recognition also help explain why Paramount+ is doubling down with a third season.

Thornton’s lead performance quickly drew awards attention. Following Season 1, he received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor in a Drama Series for his work on Landman. By late 2025, coverage also noted a Critics Choice Awards nomination in the same category. That kind of recognition signaled that the show was not only a ratings performer, but also a prestige contender.

The ensemble around Thornton has grown more high‑profile with each season. Among the key players:

  • Demi Moore as Cami Miller, widow of oil tycoon Monty Miller.
  • Andy Garcia as Gallino, a former cartel figure turned ambitious oil investor.
  • Sam Elliott as Tommy’s father, introduced in Season 2.
  • Returning and supporting cast including Ali Larter, Jacob Lofland, Michelle Randolph, Paulina Chávez, Kayla Wallace, Mark Collie, James Jordan, and Colm Feore.

Season 2 in particular shifted several of these characters into new positions. After Monty Miller’s death, Tommy becomes president of M‑Tex Oil, as detailed in Houston‑area coverage. He now answers to Cami, who pushes him to his limits both professionally and emotionally. At the same time, Tommy’s son Cooper drifts into a business partnership with Gallino, whose background in cartel activity adds a sharper edge to the financial stakes.

Those interlocking arcs have given the show the feel of a sprawling, ongoing saga rather than a self‑contained limited series, which helps make a third season feel natural rather than stretched.

Built for the Long Haul: What the Creators Have Said

The Season 3 renewal also lines up with comments from the people making the show, who have described Landman as a long‑form project from the beginning.

Co‑creator and showrunner Christian Wallace has repeatedly emphasized how much story remains. In interviews cited by entertainment outlets, he said that even after two seasons, the writers are “still just skimming the surface” of this world. He pointed to West Texas, the oil and gas industry, and Fort Worth’s social circles as “such fertile soil for storytelling.”

Wallace also noted a striking detail about the show’s pacing. He explained that Season 1 covers roughly 10 days of story time, with Season 2 unfolding on a similarly compressed timeline. That approach leaves room for many more seasons without pushing characters forward unrealistically fast.

Thornton has echoed that sense of a longer plan. He told The Hollywood Reporter, in remarks later summarized by other outlets, that he signed a multi‑year deal for roughly four to five years of Landman. He added that he wants to keep playing Tommy “as long as I’m able” or until the story reaches a natural end.

Taken together, those comments make Season 3 feel less like an unexpected extension and more like the next planned chapter in a multi‑year arc.

What We Know, and What We Don’t, About Season 3

For all the excitement, details on the new season remain very limited.

Here is what has been formally established through Paramount’s announcement and subsequent coverage:

  • Season 3 is officially ordered for Paramount+.
  • The renewal was announced on December 5, 2025, and reported widely on December 6 — 7.
  • The decision is explicitly tied to record‑setting performance of the Season 2 premiere, including the 9.2 million views in two days figure and the “biggest premiere in Paramount+ history” label.
  • Season 2 is still airing, with its finale set for January 18, 2026, so Season 3 will arrive at some later, not yet specified date.

At the same time, several points remain undisclosed as of early December 2025:

  • No Season 3 premiere date has been announced.
  • Paramount+ has not confirmed a production start date or filming schedule.
  • There is no official episode count for Season 3, though the first two seasons each ran 10 episodes.
  • The studio has not released any new casting announcements, nor has it shared a Season 3 logline or plot synopsis.

Coverage of the renewal consistently notes that Paramount has not offered creative details yet. Any assumptions about time jumps, location changes, or character fates would be speculation at this stage.

What Happens Next for Fans

In the short term, the most important thing for Landman viewers is simple. New episodes of Season 2 continue to arrive every Sunday at 3:00 a.m. Eastern on Paramount+, with the season wrapping on January 18, 2026.

Because the renewal came so early in Season 2’s run, there is now a different energy around those remaining episodes. Storylines involving Tommy’s presidency at M‑Tex, his increasingly strained relationship with Cami, and Cooper’s dangerous business ties to Gallino no longer feel like they must resolve everything immediately. Instead, fans can watch knowing the writers have at least one more season to explore the consequences.

On the industry side, the next concrete milestone will likely be a production update or casting announcement sometime after the Season 2 finale. Given the show’s performance, it will be worth watching how quickly Paramount moves Landman back into production, and whether Season 3 can maintain the pattern of late‑year premieres that the first two seasons set.

For now, the headline is clear. Landman is not just surviving the crowded streaming landscape. It is thriving enough that Paramount+ has already carved out space for a third year in West Texas, even before this one ends.

Lucy Miller
Lucy Miller

Lucy Miller is a seasoned TV show blogger and journalist known for her sharp insights and witty commentary on the ever-evolving world of entertainment. With a knack for spotting hidden gems and predicting the next big hits, Lucy's reviews have become a trusted source for TV enthusiasts seeking fresh perspectives. When she's not binge-watching the latest series, she's interviewing industry insiders and uncovering behind-the-scenes stories.

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