All good shows must come to an end (except Reno 911!, which is probably going to outlive us all). This year looks especially brutal, with over 40 TV favorites concluding, being canceled, or just outright disappearing: There’s a completed final season of Snowpiercer that TNT isn’t going to bother to air, and the same goes for 61st Street at AMC. Not cool.
Here are the beloved TV series that will be leaving us in 2023. Courage.
TV Shows ending in 2023

The Arrested Development of the darkest timeline will wrap up with Season 4, which means we’ll finally learn who will succeed Roy family patriarch Logan (Brian Cox) as the head of Waystar Royco—if the company still exists by then. The hilariously caustic barbs traded between Logan, Roman (Kieran Culkin), Shiv (Sarah Snook), Kendall (Jeremy Strong), Connor (Alan Ruck), and Cousin Greg (Nicholas Braun) will begin running out on Sunday, March 26.
Will troubled hitman Barry (Bill Hader) finally realize his Hollywood dream of becoming an actor? He’ll have to find a way out of prison first. Season 4 picks up after Barry gets betrayed by his acting teacher Cousineau (Henry Winkler), imprisoned and bent on vengeance against Cousineau, or handler Funches (Stephen Root), or frenemy Noho Hank (Anthony Carrigan), or maybe even ex-girlfriend Sally (Sarah Goldberg). The Barry farewell tour begins Sunday, April 16.
Ted Lasso (Apple TV+)
The comedy that made people realize that Apple TV+ was a thing will end with Season 3. Can you imagine the last couple of years without Ted Lasso? Impossible—thanks for your pandemic cheer-up duty, Ted. The fish-out-of-astroturf tale of American football coach Ted (Jason Sudeikis) coaching a British soccer team has been a funny and touching delight, and Sudeikis is open to a Ted Lasso spinoff (like Oi! with Roy Kent?). Season 3 begins Wednesday, March 15.
The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (Prime Video)

Midge Maisel’s (Rachel Brosnahan) talky and turbulent journey from ’50s housewife to ’60s standup comedian will conclude with Season 5, and she’s more determined than ever to become a star. What that means for manager/BFF Susie (Alex Borstein), her still-skeptical parents (Marin Hinkle and Tony Shaloub), and her ex-husband (Michael Zegan) is anyone’s guess. The final season of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel will kick off on Friday, April 14.
The Handmaid’s Tale (Hulu)
Hulu’s acclaimed feel-bad hit The Handmaid’s Tale isn’t ending because it now feels more like a current documentary than a future dystopian drama (see also: Idiocracy) . . . or is it? Whatever the case, Season 6 promises to be the longest and most harrowing yet for June (Elisabeth Moss) and refugees of Gilead and will lead into sequel series The Testaments. There’s no premiere date yet for the final season of The Handmaid’s Tale, but it’s expected late in 2023 (or early 2024).
More TV shows ending in 2023
- The Blacklist (NBC, Peacock)
- Carnival Row (Prime Video)
- Cobra Kai (Netflix)
- The Crown (Netflix)
- Doom Patrol (HBO Max)
- Endeavour (PBS)
- Fear the Walking Dead (AMC, AMC+)
- Firefly Lane (Netflix)
- The Flash (The CW)
- The Goldbergs (ABC, Hulu)
- Happy Valley (BBC America, AMC+)
- The Hardy Boys (Hulu)
- Hunters (Prime Video)
- Manifest (Netflix)
- Mayans MC (FX, Hulu)
- A Million Little Things (ABC, Hulu)
- Mo (Netflix)
- My Brilliant Friend (HBO, HBO Max)
- Nancy Drew (The CW)
- NCIS: Los Angeles (CBS, Paramount+)
- Never Have I Ever (Netflix)
- New Amsterdam (NBC, Peacock)
- Riverdale (The CW)
- Sanditon (PBS)
- Servant (Apple TV+)
- Snowfall (FX, Hulu)
- Star Trek: Picard (Paramount+)
- Titans (HBO Max)
- Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan (Prime Video)
- The Umbrella Academy (Netflix)
- Whose Line Is It Anyway? (The CW)
- Workin’ Moms (Netflix)
- Wu-Tang: An American Saga (Hulu)
- Your Honor (SHOWTIME)