Prime Video has unleashed the gripping official trailer for Your Fault: London Season 2, the second chapter in the steamy British remake of Mercedes Ron’s Culpables trilogy. Set for a 2026 release, the trailer centers on a devastating moment: “Nick never meant to say it out loud. It was supposed to stay buried — unfinished thoughts, unspoken truth, locked safely inside his chest. But once the truth found a microphone… Oxford heard everything. And there was no rewinding it. No taking it back. No hiding from the fallout that followed.”

My Fault: London' Sequel: Release Date, Cast, Plot Details - Betches

The teaser promises high-stakes drama: “Season 2 of Your Fault: London turns one moment into a chain reaction — where reputation, love, and identity collide in front of an audience that can’t un-hear the truth. One voice. One confession. And consequences that echo far beyond the room.” It ends with a provocative question: “When the truth goes public, who pays the price?”

Following the massive success of My Fault: London in February 2025—which skyrocketed to the top of Prime Video charts and drew millions of views—the sequel dives deeper into Noah (Asha Banks) and Nick’s (Matthew Broome) forbidden step-sibling romance. After the first film’s intense passion and family tensions, Season 2 shifts gears: Noah starts fresh at prestigious Oxford University, while Nick steps into the high-pressure world of his father William’s (Ray Fearon) business empire.

Distance and new temptations strain their bond, but the real explosion comes from Nick’s unintended public confession—captured on a microphone at Oxford. Quick trailer cuts show the aftermath: viral outrage, judgmental stares on campus, strained family dinners, jealous rivals circling, and Noah questioning if their love can survive scrutiny. Flashbacks reveal Nick’s vulnerable moment, perhaps a heartfelt declaration or explosive revelation meant only for Noah, now amplified for the world.

Directed once more by Dani Girdwood and Charlotte Fassler, filming wrapped in summer 2025 across stunning UK locations, including Oxford’s historic halls and London’s sleek corporate towers. The production moved fast after the first film’s breakout, with Prime Video greenlighting the full trilogy early to capitalize on fan demand.

Asha Banks and Matthew Broome reprise their roles, their undeniable chemistry fueling the trailer’s steamy glimpses—rain-drenched arguments turning to desperate embraces, secret meetings amid Oxford’s ancient spires, and heated confrontations in boardrooms. Returning cast includes Eve Macklin as Noah’s mother Ella, Ray Fearon as the formidable William, and others navigating the family’s fallout. New additions tease fresh conflicts: potential love interests at university and workplace rivals threatening to pull Noah and Nick apart.

Adapted from Ron’s second novel Culpa Tuya, the story explores maturity amid chaos—jealousy over new paths, identity crises under public eyes, and the weight of secrets exposed. The British remake tones down some edgier book elements for broader appeal while amplifying class clashes and emotional depth in elite settings.

Fan frenzy hit fever pitch with the trailer’s release. Social media erupted with theories: Is Nick’s confession a marriage proposal, admission of deeper feelings, or something tied to family scandals? Hashtags like #YourFaultLondon and #NoahAndNick dominated trends, with viewers debating who suffers most from the publicity—Nick’s reputation in business circles or Noah’s fresh start at Oxford.

The original Spanish Culpa Tuya (2024) shattered records, and this remake aims to match that heat with polished UK flair. Moody cinematography contrasts Oxford’s golden academia with stormy London nights, backed by a pulsing soundtrack blending emotional indie tracks and upbeat tension.

As the trilogy builds to Our Fault: London, this chapter raises stakes: Can forbidden love endure when one slip turns private passion public? The trailer warns of a chain reaction—reputations shattered, alliances tested, identities redefined.

No exact premiere date yet, but speculation points to mid-2026, possibly aligning with Valentine’s for maximum romance buzz. In the meantime, fans are rewatching the first film, dissecting every trailer frame, and asking: When truth escapes, who truly pays?

Prime Video’s YA gamble pays off again, blending addictive angst, swoon-worthy moments, and timely themes of privacy in a viral world. One confession. Endless consequences. Your Fault: London Season 2 looks set to break hearts—and records.