HGTV’s 2026 slate keeps growing as the network adds new series and more returning favorites
HGTV is not easing into 2026. After canceling multiple fan favorites in 2025 and facing vocal backlash, the network is loading the new year with a mix of ambitious originals and comfort-viewing staples aimed at giving you something to watch in every mood. Expect more house hunts, more renovation drama, and a surprising number of shows that treat real estate as pure escapism.
Executives are backing that strategy with volume. HGTV has committed to over 100 new episodes across its schedule and later added more than 30 additional installments, so you are looking at well over 130 fresh hours of home content before you even factor in specials and spinoffs. The result is a 2026 slate that keeps expanding as new series are ordered and returning hits quietly secure extra seasons.
HGTV leans into volume after a rocky 2025
The size of HGTV’s bet becomes clear when you look at the numbers. The network has said that it has “announced over 100 new episodes” across several series for 2026, a direct response to the anger that followed the cancellation of six fan favorites. Later in the year, HGTV said it would add “over 30 episodes of” to the 2026 slate, anchored by new and returning shows that focus on outrageous rentals, wacky listings, and a European chateau renovation. On top of that, HGTV has separately touted “nearly 400 new episodes” of programming when you add in long-running franchises and new formats.
That surge is not just about filling hours; it is about reassuring you that the HGTV formula is still intact after a turbulent stretch. One report framed the 2025 cancellations as a move that many viewers blamed on cost-cutting, and the 2026 plan looks like a course correction that emphasizes familiar personalities, aspirational transformations, and a few splashy experiments. You see that approach in the way HGTV has renewed four of its most popular shows for new seasons, as highlighted in coverage of how HGTV renews shows for, while also quietly slotting in fresh concepts that try to capture the same bingeable energy.
House hunting staples get a supersized 2026
If you rely on HGTV as background comfort, the 2026 schedule is built for you. The network has already promoted “hundreds of fresh” episodes of its flagship House Hunters franchise, with one report pointing out that four new shows are joining those installments as part of the 2026 rollout. Another description of the lineup notes that HGTV has revealed an upcoming programming slate that includes a large batch of new House Hunters episodes alongside other returning series, which signals that you will be seeing the familiar three-home tours in multiple nightly slots. Those half-hour stories of couples arguing about open floor plans remain the backbone of the network.
The international side of that formula is not getting left behind either. New installments of House Hunters International are part of the same 2026 push, giving you a steady stream of buyers agonizing over storage space in Paris apartments or beach access in Costa Rica. Coverage of HGTV’s 2026 show lineup also highlights that long-running staples like Love It or are returning with new episodes, with additional reporting confirming more Love It or content in 2026. For you, that means the core HGTV experience of watching real people weigh renovation against relocation is not going anywhere, even as the network experiments elsewhere.
New series push HGTV into wilder territory
Where the 2026 slate feels most different is in the shows that treat real estate as spectacle. HGTV has ordered a new series called Wild Vacation Rentals, which executives described as part of a group of “outrageous vacation rentals, wacky real estate listings and a fantastical European chateau renovation” that will hit your screen in 2026. A separate feature on the schedule calls Wild Vacation Rentals the kickoff to a year of escapist real estate, explaining that each episode follows travelers as they check into the most over-the-top stay property of the week. That same package of programming also includes a new season of Zillow Gone Wild, which turns viral listings into appointment TV, and more episodes of Zillow Gone Wild were explicitly included when HGTV added those 30-plus episodes of original content.
Other new formats tap into different corners of your real estate curiosity. HGTV has greenlit Bachelor Mansion Takeover, which turns the famous dating-show property into the site of a renovation and design competition, blending fandoms that might not normally overlap. The network is also leaning into destination makeovers with Renovation Aloha, a series set in Hawaii that appears in multiple rundowns of HGTV’s new 2026 shows, and more episodes of Renovation Aloha are part of the expanded slate. If you prefer something more fairy-tale, HGTV is also backing Castle Impossible, which follows the restoration of a European chateau that initially looks like a lost cause.
Competition and renovation franchises stay at the center
Even as HGTV experiments with rentals and castles, you still get plenty of renovation and competition. The network has ordered more of The Flip Off, a series that stars Chr and pits renovation teams against each other as they try to outdo one another on profit and design. Coverage of HGTV’s internal orders stresses that The Flip Off is part of the “over 100” new episodes the network has committed to, and additional descriptions of The Flip Off note that returning champions are not ready to give up their crown easily. If you like the structured stakes of a contest, that format sits alongside returning competition hit Rock the Block, which is also included in the list of renewed shows, with more Rock the Block episodes helping fill out the 2026 calendar.
Scripted-style storytelling around small-town makeovers is also sticking around. HGTV has confirmed another season of Home Town, with one report listing Home Town as returning for Season 10 and another highlighting more Home Town episodes as part of HGTV’s broader renewal strategy. The franchise is also branching into hospitality with Home Town: Inn, where the hosts tackle a hotel, eatery, and storefront as part of a larger community project. That spinoff appears alongside renovation series like Property Brothers: Under Pressure in coverage of HGTV’s 2026 changes, reinforcing that the network still sees long-running personalities as the safest way to keep you engaged.
How the 2026 slate reshapes your HGTV viewing
Zoom out, and the 2026 slate looks like HGTV’s attempt to give you a menu instead of a single dish. If you want classic comfort, you have a deep bench of House Hun episodes, more Love Story style renovation-versus-move decisions, and returning seasons of shows that feel like old friends. If you want aspiration and escape, you can drop into outrageous rentals, scroll-worthy listings, or a chateau that looks like it fell out of a fantasy film. Competitive types can follow The Flip Off, Cross style build-offs, and other renovation battles that turn design into sport.
For you as a viewer, the practical impact is simple. HGTV is asking you to spend more of your casual viewing time in its ecosystem, whether you are streaming a new batch of Winter Olympics caliber international house hunts, checking in on a small-town inn with Dark Winds of renovation drama, or watching celebrities and superfans collide inside the Love Is Blind adjacent Bachelor mansion. The sheer number of episodes, from the initial 100-plus order to the later batch of more than 30 originals and the broader claim of nearly 400 new hours, means that if you like even one corner of HGTV’s formula, 2026 gives you more of it than ever before.
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*This article was developed with AI-powered tools and has been carefully reviewed by our editors.
