– Launching on Apple TV+ in mid-July
– Contains 10 episodes
– Trailers unveiled in May and June
– Key cast members set to return
– Other actors confirmed to have joined the cast
– Plot synopsis revealed
– Draws from Isaac Asimov’s ‘Foundation and Empire’ and ‘Second Foundation’ books
– Fourth season reportedly in development with a new showrunner
Foundation season 3 is just days away from airing on Apple TV+. The critically-acclaimed space opera returns on July 11, so you don’t have long to read up on everything we know about it.
Before you proceed, check out my Foundation season 3 review to see what I thought of its first five episodes. Once you’ve done that (or bookmarked it for later), you can read on to learn more about Foundation‘s third season, including more on its confirmed cast, story specifics, trailers, and the sci-fi series’ future.
Full spoilers follow for Foundation season 2. Potential spoilers also follow for this season and Isaac Asimov’s book series namesake.
Foundation season 3 release date
Foundation season 3 arrives TV+ on Friday, July 11. It’ll debut with a one-episode premiere and new chapters will drop every Friday until the finale on September 12.
Initially, its cast and crew declined to comment on the sci-fi series’ season 3 renewal when I asked them about this in July 2023. Thankfully, Foundation season 3 was confirmed to be in the works by Apple later that year.
Development didn’t always go as planned, though. Last February, Foundation season 3 faced an agonizing filming delay amid multiple issues, including apparent disputes over its budget. Less than two weeks later, things seemed rosy again, with principal photography starting up again on Foundation‘s next installment.
However, one week later, rumors quickly spread that showrunner David S. Goyver had stepped back from the Apple TV+ sci-fi series, with fellow executive producer Bill Bost reportedly stepping in to fill the gap. Suffice it to say, the road has been a bumpy one for Foundation‘s third season.
Foundation season 3 trailer
Foundation season 3’s official trailer was released on June 11, and it not only revealed the Apple TV+ show’s most dangerous villain yet, but also teased an unexpected alliance between the show’s main factions.
Missed season 3’s first teaser, which arrived in mid-May? Check it out below:
Foundation season 3 confirmed cast
Major spoilers follow for Foundation season 2.
Here’s who we’ll see in Foundation season 3:
- Jared Harris as Hari Seldon
- Lee Pace as Brother Day
- Lou Llobell as Gaal Dornick
- Laura Birn as Demerzel
- Cassian Bilton as Brother Dawn
- Terrence Mann as Brother Dusk
- Cassian Bilton as Brother Dawn
- Alexander Siddig as Doctor Ebling Mis
- Troy Kotsur as Preem Palver
- Pilou Asbaek as The Mule
- Cherry Jones as Foundation Ambassador Quent
- Synnøve Karlsen as Bayta Mallow
- Cody Fern as Toran Mallow
- Brandon P Bell as Han Pritcher
- Tómas Lemarquis as Magnifico Giganticus
- Yootha Wong-Loi-Sing as Song
- Leo Bill as Mayor Indbur
The first seven actors return from seasons 1 and 2, while the rest are all newcomers for the latest 10-episode installment. That includes this season’s villain, aka The Mule, who’ll be played by Pilou Asbaek after a season 3 cast shake-up last year. Speaking to me ahead of this season’s launch, Asbaek explained why The Mule “needs to be [seen as] a big threat” to both Empire and The Foundation.
Flashback sequences notwithstanding, it’s incredibly unlikely that we’ll see any other actors return from season 2. Its follow-up is set over 150 years after the series’ sophomore outing, so the likes of Ella Rae Smith’s Queen Sareth and Kulvinder Ghir’s Poly are surely dead by this point.
One major character who definitely won’t return is Leah Harvey’s Salvor Hardin. She sacrificed herself to save Gaal in ‘Creation Myths’, aka season 2’s final episode. Foundation‘s universe has the potential to bring people back from the dead – we’re looking at you, Hari – but, considering Salvor was cremated, she’s officially dead and gone.
Foundation season 3 story synopsis and rumors
Major spoilers follow for Foundation season 2.
Here’s Foundation season 3′ story synopsis: “Set 152 years after the events of season 2, The Foundation has become increasingly established far beyond its humble beginnings while the Cleonic Dynasty’s Empire has dwindled.
“As both of these galactic powers forge an uneasy alliance, a threat to the entire galaxy appears in the fearsome form of a warlord known as The Mule whose sights are set on ruling the universe by use of physical and military force, as well as mind control. It’s anyone’s guess who’ll win, who’ll lose, who’ll live, and who’ll die as Hari, Gaal, the Cleons, and Demerzel play a potentially deadly game of intergalactic chess.”
That’s just enough to go but, if you want on where this season could go narratively, my Foundation season 2 ending explainer looks at the possible storylines and subplots that could set up this season. If you don’t want to click away from this page, though, I’ll give you an in-depth, spoiler-filled breakdown from this point on.
Let’s start with Empire. Season 2’s incarnations of its three Emperors – Dawn, Day, and Dusk, all clones of Cleon I – no longer sit on the throne (or thrones, if you will). Day suffocated in space, Dusk was killed by Demerzel, and Dawn fled with Queen Sareth after Demerzel threatened to execute Sareth for her alleged failed assassination attempt on Day in season 2’s opening episode.
Demerzel hired the Blind Angels to murder Day because he wanted to marry Sareth and father his own children, which would’ve ended the Cleonic Dynasty. This plan went against the directives Cleon I gave Demerzel – remember, she’s a robot – centuries earlier, which included maintaining his clone-based blood line. Long story short: Demerzel planned to set up Sareth as Day’s would-be murderer and execute her to preserve the status quo.
With season 2’s Emperors deceased or on the run, Demerzel had to decant new versions of all three clones – something she’s never had to do before. With season 3 set over a century later, these new iterations aren’t the current incumbents on the throne, though, so she’s had to carry out the process once more since.
Meanwhile, in season 2 episode 9, aka ‘Long Ago, Not Far Away’, the Vault-based version of Hari Seldon – you didn’t forget there were two of him, did you? – showed Demerzel how to operate the Prime Radiant. Essentially a data storage device, the Prime Radiant contains all of Hari’s psychohistory-based math, which is being used to help guide humanity through its darkest age yet.
The Prime Radiant also exists in a state of supposition, allowing it to exist in two places at once. That means the living Hari (the one working with Gaal) possesses one and, unfortunately for The Foundation, the other is now in Demerzel’s hands. Once she can read Hari’s math, she’ll be able to use it and get a reading on how the galaxy’s future is supposed to play out.
Speaking of the Vault, ‘Creation Myths’ revealed that the mysterious 4D structure survived the destruction of Terminus. Expect it to continue playing a big role in Foundation‘s overarching plot.
The Foundation’s survival isn’t the only thing Empire has to contend with.
For starters, Dawn and Sareth’s absconsion is a worrying prospect – Sareth is pregnant with Dawn’s child, meaning their firstborn has a claim to the Empire’s throne. With Foundation season 3 featuring a major time jump, we could see their child’s next of kin make a play for the royal seat if this particular narrative is followed up on. After all, in the second half of ‘Foundation and Empire’, the second novel in Asismov’s Foundation book trilogy, the Empire is engulfed by civil war. This plot point could be adapted for a showdown between Dawn and Sareth’s bloodline and the Cleonic dynasty.
Elsewhere, Gaal and Hari’s successful recruitment of the Mentalics, a race with psychic abilities, means The Foundation is stronger than ever. Add the Mentalics to the Foundation’s seven planetary bodies, plus the Empire losing the ability to hyperjump – the genetically engineered Spacers are no longer enslaved by them – and, as this season’s story synopsis points out, the playing field is more level than ever before.
Ignis is our home: a world worth saving. We’ll fight for its future. Will you do the same for yours? pic.twitter.com/MFVqs5DJwlJune 5, 2025
Hari, Gaal, and company shouldn’t expect to walk all over Empire now, however. The emergence of The Mule – a powerful Mentalic who begins conquering worlds in Asmiov’s book series – will surely give rise to the Third Seldon Crisis.
These crises are fixed points in humanity’s existence that determine whether The Foundation succeeds or fails. So far, The Foundation has navigated two potential calamities: surviving in the galaxy’s outer reaches and bypassing a full-blown war with the Empire.
The Mule, though, will pose the biggest threat – and that’s saying something – to The Foundation’s existence. To combat him, Gaal and Hari have entered cryosleep on the Mentalics’ sanctuary of Ignis. That way, they can reawaken when The Mule shows up and help lead the fight against him. The rest of the Mentalics will hone their abilities and learn about psychohistory in the interim 150-year period so they’re ready to battle The Mule and his forces when the time comes.
Is Foundation season 4 in the works?
Not officially. However, a fourth season is reportedly in the works with a new showrunner in Fear the Walking Dead alumnus Ian Goldberg.
For what it’s worth, Llobell and Harris told me they don’t know if Foundation season 4 has been secretly greenlit. However, by the time season 3 ends, Foundation will have only covered the first two main novels in Asimov’s book series – ‘Foundation’ and ‘Foundation & Empire’, plus the first half of the third novel titled ‘Second Foundation’. There are two prequel novels and two sequel books that expand on Foundation‘s unique universe, too, so there’s plenty more storytelling ground to cover.
Ahead of the first season’s launch, Goyer (per Decider) revealed he had an eight-season outline for the series. It’s deviated somewhat from the story told in Asimov’s books so, alongside adapting parts from the wider source material, a more complete narrative could be told in the seasons to come.
As long as Foundation continues to draw in a big enough audience to justify its financial outlay, Apple should continue to bankroll its development. If this season struggles to draw to do that, though, the tech titan has shown it isn’t afraid to cancel shows before their time. The jury is out on whether Foundation season 3 will be the show’s latest or final chapter, then.
For more Apple TV Plus-based coverage, check out our guides on Presumed Innocent season 2, Severance season 3, Ted Lasso season 4, and Slow Horses season 5.