The Summer I Turned Pretty Season 3 Episode Schedule and Times, Trailer,  Cast, and Everything You Need to Know | Teen Vogue

THE SUMMER I TURNED PRETTY SEASON 3 Release Date buzz is everywhere. Lola Tung leads the cast again as Belly, but this time Conrad and Jeremiah refuse to step aside — and the emotional fallout may change the Fisher brothers forever.

The final chapter of Jenny Han’s beloved adaptation has wrapped its emotional run on Prime Video, with Season 3 (the third and concluding season) premiering in summer 2025. The 11-episode season kicked off with a two-episode drop on July 16, 2025, followed by weekly Wednesday releases at 3 a.m. ET / 12 a.m. PT, ending with the series finale on September 17, 2025. As of March 2026, the full season remains available for streaming, allowing fans to relive (or discover) the intense resolution to one of TV’s most debated love triangles.

Adapted primarily from We’ll Always Have Summer (the trilogy’s third book), Season 3 jumps forward in time: Belly Conklin (Lola Tung) is now in college, deeply committed to Jeremiah Fisher (Gavin Casalegno) after four years together. What begins as anticipation for another sun-soaked summer in Cousins Beach quickly unravels with shocking revelations, rekindled feelings, and high-stakes decisions that force everyone to confront long-buried truths.

The love triangle—Belly torn between the brooding, intense Conrad Fisher (Christopher Briney) and the charming, supportive Jeremiah—doesn’t fade quietly. Instead, it escalates dramatically, with both brothers refusing to fully step aside. Conrad’s lingering love resurfaces in raw confessions and quiet persistence, while Jeremiah fights to hold onto the future he envisioned with Belly. The emotional fallout ripples through the Fisher family, straining their brotherly bond, challenging loyalties, and pushing each toward personal growth amid heartbreak.

The Summer I Turned Pretty Season 3 Episode Schedule and Times, Trailer,  Cast, and Everything You Need to Know | Teen Vogue

The Triangle Intensifies: No One Steps Aside Easily

Season 3 opens with Belly and Jeremiah engaged and planning their life together, but cracks form almost immediately. A late-night confession from Conrad ignites doubt, leading Belly to question her path. The brothers’ dynamic—already fractured—faces its toughest test as old wounds reopen. Conrad, ever the protector, grapples with regret and maturity, while Jeremiah’s golden-retriever loyalty turns to quiet pain as he senses the inevitable.

Key developments include:

Belly’s engagement to Jeremiah crumbling under the weight of unresolved feelings.
Conrad’s subtle yet powerful efforts to show he’s changed, offering Belly the space she needs.
Family gatherings at Cousins Beach, haunted by Susannah’s memory, amplifying the stakes.
Belly’s bold escape to Paris for independence, symbolizing a break from the cycle.

Both Conrad and Jeremiah play active roles in the chaos—neither fully retreats, creating tension that tests their brotherhood. Insiders and episode breakdowns highlight how this refusal to “step aside” leads to mature, tearful conversations between the brothers, with Jeremiah eventually offering reluctant understanding. The fallout reshapes them: Conrad confronts his emotional barriers, and Jeremiah finds strength in letting go, emerging with his own path forward (including hints of new connections).

The season’s emotional core lies in Belly’s agency—she doesn’t simply fall back into old patterns but chooses after reflection, growth, and self-discovery. This makes the resolution feel earned, even as it devastates one side of the triangle.

(Image: Christopher Briney as Conrad Fisher in a brooding, intense close-up, his eyes conveying the deep, unspoken love that’s defined his character across seasons.)

(Image: Gavin Casalegno as Jeremiah Fisher laughing on the beach, embodying the warmth and heartbreak that made Team Jeremiah so compelling throughout the series.)

Belly’s Final Choice and the Brothers’ Transformation

In the supersized finale, the story converges in Paris. Conrad surprises Belly on the eve of her 22nd birthday, leading to charged moments of reconnection—shared sights, vulnerable talks, and undeniable chemistry. After an intimate night, doubts surface: Belly questions if their love stems from timing, loss, or true destiny. Conrad walks away heartbroken, boarding a train to Brussels.

But Belly chases him down on that moving train, wearing the infinity necklace he once gave her. In a powerful declaration set to Taylor Swift’s “Out of the Woods,” she says: “Conrad, I choose you of my own free will. If there are infinite worlds, every one of me chooses you in every one of them.” The passionate kiss seals their endgame, with a voiceover affirming Belly’s journey toward self-love and authentic choice.

The Fisher brothers’ bond endures the storm. Jeremiah finds closure and happiness (including a budding romance), while Conrad embraces vulnerability. The emotional fallout—heartbreak, forgiveness, growth—changes them forever, turning rivals into brothers who understand each other’s pain.

Deviations from the books add modern depth: expanded Paris adventures, emphasis on Belly’s independence, and no immediate wedding scene (though a teaser hints at future possibilities, including an upcoming movie sequel filming in 2026).

Fan reactions remain passionate—Team Conrad celebrates the poetic soulmate arc, while Team Jeremiah appreciates the grace given to his character. Social media and Reddit explode over iconic moments like the train chase and infinity necklace callback.

With Season 3 fully streamed, the buzz shifts to rewatches, the announced movie extension, and reflections on summer’s end. Cousins Beach may close one chapter, but the love triangle’s legacy—and the brothers’ unbreakable (if tested) bond—lingers.

Dearest fans, whether you rooted for Conrad’s intensity, Jeremiah’s steadiness, or Belly’s messy growth, this final season delivers catharsis: a choice born of free will, not obligation. The summers may fade, but the emotions? They last forever. Stream it now on Prime Video—the fallout was worth the wait.