Peacock has officially released the trailer for the fourth and final season of Bel-Air, giving fans their first look at how the acclaimed reimagining of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air will close out its story.
Since its debut, the series has carved out its own lane, one that perfectly mixes the legacy of a cultural classic with a grounded, emotional, and contemporary examination of identity, family, and belonging.
As Will (Jabari Banks) enters his senior year, he’s pulled between the freedom of youth and the expectations that come with the second chance he’s been given. The Banks family took him in and opened doors, but now Will has to decide what kind of man he wants to become, and what parts of his past he refuses to leave behind.
Carlton (Olly Sholotan), still dealing with the fallout of the choices he made last season, is pushed to confront himself in ways that could shape his future forever.
The trailer hints at moments of fear, pressure, and ultimately accountability, with Will and Carlton’s relationship at the emotional center of it all. Their bond, one of the most compelling dynamics in the series, will be tested, strengthened, and reshaped.
The adults aren’t exempt from conflict, either.
An unexpected power shift threatens to fracture the brotherhood between Phil (Adrian Holmes) and Geoffrey (Jimmy Akingbola), two men who have long served as the quiet backbone of the Banks household. Their loyalty, to each other, to the family, and to their own sense of identity, is on the line.
Viv (Cassandra Freeman), meanwhile, is wrestling with reinvention. Motherhood looks different now, and she’s assessing the version of herself she wants to be moving forward.
Hilary (Coco Jones) begins her own journey inward, navigating identity outside of the gaze of digital influence. And Ashley (Akira Akbar), now a high school freshman, finds herself pushing boundaries as she figures out where she fits in a world that’s constantly shifting.
Based on Morgan Cooper’s groundbreaking viral short film, Bel-Air has always been more than a reboot. It’s a reclamation of memory, a version that lets the emotional undercurrents of the original sit fully at the surface.
Where the 90s sitcom was bright, comedic, and joyful, Bel-Air pulls the lens closer, revealing tension beneath privilege, vulnerability beneath confidence, and pressure behind every opportunity.
The creative team behind the show, including showrunner, executive producer, and writer Carla Banks Waddles, and Cooper himself, who returns to direct the final two episodes, has built a story that feels familiar and fully new at the same time.
And with an ensemble led by Jabari Banks, the cast continues to capture the heart of the story: a boy becoming a man while shaping and reshaping the world he steps into.
The final season of Bel-Air will premiere on Peacock with three episodes, followed by new episodes dropping weekly on Mondays, with two episodes releasing on December 1 and three episodes on December 8.
Check out the trailer.


