CLARKSON’S FARM FUTURE SEALED AS SERIES FIVE CONFIRMED — AND CAMERAS ARE ALREADY ROLLING

The future of Clarkson’s Farm has finally been settled — and it’s very good news for fans of the runaway Prime Video hit.

Since launching in 2021, the documentary series has followed Jeremy Clarkson as he attempts to run Diddly Squat Farm in the heart of the Cotswolds, navigating unpredictable weather, stubborn livestock, and endless red tape.

Alongside Jeremy, viewers have grown attached to familiar faces including his straight-talking farm manager Kaleb Cooper, partner Lisa Hogan, land agent Charlie Ireland, and dry-stone waller and farmhand Gerald Cooper.

Series Six Given the Green Light

Four series of Clarkson’s Farm* have already aired, with a fifth season completed and ready for release. Now, reports suggest Amazon Prime Video bosses have officially signed off on a sixth series.

Jeremy, 65, wrapped filming for series five last year, with the new season expected to land on Prime Video in spring 2026. According to reports, filming for series six quietly began in January as colder weather set in.

A source told The Sun:
“Jezza wasted no time getting back out into the fields at Diddly Squat and firing up the cameras. Things have really gathered pace, and the team is now on track to deliver another season next year.”

The fate of beloved show Clarkson's Farm has been revealed - ahead of series five launching on Prime Video

The fate of beloved show Clarkson’s Farm has been revealed – ahead of series five launching on Prime Video

The documentary sees Jeremy running a farm in the Cotswolds (pictured with his right-hand man Kaleb Cooper)

The documentary sees Jeremy running a farm in the Cotswolds (pictured with his right-hand man Kaleb Cooper)

The show has proven to be a massive success after initially launching on Prime Video back in 2021

The show has proven to be a massive success after initially launching on Prime Video back in 2021

Clarkson’s Brief TV Break — and the Snow Rule

The update comes after Jeremy revealed in December 2025 that he planned to take a short break from television in early 2026 — his first real pause in more than 40 years.

However, he made it clear the break wouldn’t last long.

“We’ve never really stopped before,” he explained. “You finish one series and immediately start again because farming doesn’t stop.”

Jeremy added that with Kaleb working in Australia and his own commitments elsewhere, he felt it was finally time to slow down briefly — unless winter intervened.

“I said if it snows, we’ll start filming again,” he admitted.

“We’ll Definitely Do Six”

Clarkson has also been open about having no intention of ending the show just yet.

“We’ll definitely do six — Amazon want to and I want to,” he said. “I’ve got a good idea for it. I’ll stop when I run out of ideas, but I’ve still got a couple of good ones left.”

While an exact air date for series five has yet to be confirmed, it is widely expected to arrive on Prime Video in April or May.

Clarkson Slams AI Hoaxes Targeting the Show

The news follows Jeremy’s recent fury over a string of AI-generated hoaxes circulating on Facebook, falsely claiming tragedy had struck at Diddly Squat Farm.

Among the fabricated stories were claims that Gerald Cooper had died, that Lisa Hogan had left Jeremy, that Clarkson had broken his leg, and that Kaleb Cooper had welcomed another child.

“All of the stories were accompanied by completely realistic photographs — and all of them were nonsense,” Jeremy wrote in his newspaper column.

He admitted the posts were particularly upsetting for Gerald, who is unused to public attention and worried about his family seeing such false claims online.

Plenty Still to Come

Despite the challenges — from unpredictable harvests to digital misinformation — Clarkson’s Farm remains one of Prime Video’s biggest success stories.

With series five imminent and series six already in motion, fans can rest assured that Diddly Squat Farm is staying open for business.