Amazon Confirms Clarkson’s Farm Series 6 as Jeremy Clarkson Shares What Comes Next.
Amazon has confirmed that Clarkson’s Farm will return for a sixth series, offering fans clarity after months of speculation about the future of the hit Prime Video show. The update comes as Jeremy Clarkson, 65, balances a rare break from television with fresh ideas for the next chapter at Diddly Squat Farm.
Clarkson wrapped filming on series five last year, with the upcoming run expected to arrive on Amazon Prime Video in 2026. Speaking late last year, the former Top Gear presenter explained that he would be stepping away from filming in early 2026—his first extended pause in four decades—after years of near-continuous production.
“We’ve never had a rest,” Clarkson said, describing the rhythm of the show. “We wrap a series and immediately start again because farming doesn’t stop. You harvest and you’re straight into drilling for the next year.” This time, however, circumstances aligned for a brief reset. With Kaleb Cooper filming in Australia and Clarkson himself committed to Millionaire Hot Seat, the team agreed to pause and “actually wrap it.”
Despite the break, Clarkson was clear that the future of the series was secure. “There will definitely be a sixth series,” he said, adding that Amazon was keen to continue and that he had ideas ready. “I said I’ll stop doing them when there are no more ideas. But I’ve got two quite good ones, so we’ll do six and then we’ll see.”
Those plans appear to be moving forward at pace. According to reports, Amazon has now formally given series six the green light. While the production timetable remains weather-dependent—as it has always been for a show shaped by the farming calendar—Clarkson hinted that filming would resume “if it snows.” When snowfall arrived across parts of the country in January, cameras reportedly returned to Diddly Squat Farm, with Clarkson back in the fields.
Sources close to production say momentum has picked up in recent weeks, putting the team on course to deliver the new season next year. For viewers, the confirmation signals continuity at a time when the show’s tone has been shifting. Earlier series leaned heavily on first-time farming mishaps and learning curves; more recent episodes have focused on the realities of running a farm business under tightening margins and changing conditions.
That evolution is expected to continue in series six. Clarkson has increasingly spoken about the pressure facing farms and rural enterprises, and how decisions made off-camera can be as consequential as anything seen on screen. The next series is likely to reflect that more reflective mood, balancing the show’s trademark humour with longer-term choices about sustainability, staffing, and the future of Diddly Squat.
Before series six arrives, fans are still awaiting the release of series five. An exact broadcast date has yet to be confirmed, but it is widely expected to land on Amazon Prime Video in April or May. That season was filmed before Clarkson’s brief hiatus and will bridge the gap between the earlier, high-energy years and the more considered direction the show is now taking.
For Amazon, Clarkson’s Farm remains one of its most successful unscripted titles, drawing large audiences well beyond the UK. For Clarkson, the renewal appears to be about more than ratings. As he has suggested, the show continues only while it has something meaningful to say.
With series six now officially on the way, viewers can expect a return to Diddly Squat that feels familiar—but shaped by the realities of time, change, and decisions that no longer feel optional.







