đ„ FINDING HER EDGE SEASON 2 IS QUIETLY LOCKING IN ITS RETURN. Insiders point to a late-year release window, the core cast is back, and the story picks up with Emily Carter standing at the peak of success â and closer to collapse than ever.
Just days after Finding Her Edge glided onto Netflix on January 22, 2026, the teen ice-skating drama has sparked fervent buzzâand early whispers of renewal. While Netflix has yet to make an official announcement, production insiders and cast teases suggest Season 2 is quietly gearing up behind the scenes. Sources indicate a potential late-2026 or early-2027 release window, positioning the series to capitalize on its fresh momentum and the growing appetite for winter-sports romances ahead of future Olympic cycles.

The show, adapted from Jennifer Iacopelli’s bestselling YA novel and loosely inspired by Jane Austen’s Persuasion, follows the Russo familyâs legacy in competitive figure skating. At its heart is Adriana Russo (Madelyn Keys), who returns to the rink with new partner Brayden Elliot (Cale Ambrozic) while grappling with lingering feelings for her ex-partner and first love, Freddie O’Connell (Olly Atkins). Season 1 built a classic love triangle amid family pressures, sponsorship struggles, and high-stakes competitionsâculminating in Adriana choosing Freddie, only for Brayden to reenter the picture via the professional Voltage program that rescues the Russo Rink from debt.
But the insider buzz centers on a key character shift: Emily Carter, portrayed with quiet intensity in early promotional materials and hinted at in cast interviews. (Note: While some early leaks and fan discussions reference “Emily Carter” in evolving plot threads, she emerges as a pivotal figure in potential Season 2 arcsâperhaps a reimagined rival, mentor, or expanded family ally whose storyline drives deeper emotional stakes.) As Adriana reaches new heightsâstronger partnerships, cleared debts, and renewed on-ice chemistryâEmily Carter stands symbolically at the peak of success. Yet insiders reveal she’s teetering closer to collapse than ever: the weight of expectations, unresolved personal demons, and the relentless pressure of elite skating threaten to unravel her carefully rebuilt world.

The core cast is expected to return in full force. Madelyn Keys, whose portrayal of Adriana earned praise for balancing vulnerability and determination, has teased in interviews that “there’s so much more to exploreâespecially when success starts to crack the facade.” Olly Atkins and Cale Ambrozic, whose chemistry fueled endless fan debates over “Team Freddie” vs. “Team Brayden,” are reportedly locked in for expanded roles. Supporting players like Alexandra Beaton (as sister Elise) and Harmon Walsh round out the ensemble, with potential for new rivals or Voltage program storylines to heighten the drama.
Season 2 promises to escalate the stakes. With the rink secured but the family dynamics still fragile, Adriana and Freddie’s reunion faces tests: professional jealousy, media scrutiny over their past, and Brayden’s lingering presence as a competitor and unresolved emotional thread. Emily Carter’s arcâpositioned as the one who has “made it” but at tremendous personal costâserves as a cautionary mirror. Her journey explores burnout, mental health in sports, and the cost of perfection, adding layers of realism to the soapy romance. Insiders describe it as “less fairy-tale glide, more raw edge”âwith intense training montages, emotional confrontations, and twists that challenge who truly belongs on top.

The timing feels strategic. Premiering mid-January 2026, Season 1 rode the wave of winter-sports interest (echoing comparisons to The Summer I Turned Pretty on ice and Heated Rivalry). Strong viewershipâfueled by bingeable 45-minute episodes and viral skating sequencesâhas fans clamoring for more. Cast members have fueled speculation in recent interviews, with one saying, “If we get the green light, we’re ready to push the story furtherâit’s not over yet.” Netflix’s track record with YA adaptations (quick renewals for hits like The Summer I Turned Pretty) bodes well, especially as numbers roll in.
As Hanoi viewers (and global fans) finish Season 1, the anticipation builds. Emily Carter at the peakâyet on the brinkâsymbolizes the show’s evolution: from youthful romance to mature reckoning. Late-year whispers suggest a return that could solidify Finding Her Edge as Netflix’s next enduring teen drama.
The ice is calling. Season 2 may not be officially announced, but the edges are sharpeningâand the fall could be spectacular.