For the first time in the history of the franchise, a season of Bridgerton has failed to secure a spot in Netflix’s most-watched series of all time list. Now that the all-important 91-day window has officially closed for Season 4, we finally have a complete picture of its viewership—and it signals a shifting tide for the crown jewel of Shondaland.
If you’ve been following our weekly Top 10 reports, you’ll know we’ve been keeping a very close eye on the ton. Up until now, Bridgerton has had a flawless track record. Season 1, Season 2, Season 3, and even the limited prequel series Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story all successfully climbed their way into Netflix’s All-Time Top 10 English TV list, a testament to the franchise’s global dominance.
However, as of this week, it has officially been 91 days since Bridgerton Season 4 Part 2 dropped on February 26th (May 28th was the exact end date). Because Netflix measures its all-time most popular lists based on the views (Complete Viewing Equivalents, or hours viewed divided by runtime) a title accumulates in its first 91 days on the platform, the final tally is locked in. And unfortunately for the latest Bridgerton sibling to take the spotlight, the numbers just didn’t quite breach the top-tier threshold.
The Bridgerton Franchise 91-Day Viewership History

To give you a clearer picture of how the franchise has performed over the years, we’ve compiled the final 91-day Complete Viewing
Equivalents (CVE) for every season of Bridgerton, including the Queen Charlotte spin-off.
As you can see, every previous installment cracked the All-Time Top 10 during its launch window. However, because the floor for entry into the elite English TV list has been steadily raised by recent mega-hits (the threshold currently sits at 98.2 million views, thanks to His & Hers squeezing in earlier this year, knocking out The Night Agent S1), Season 4 has become the first of the ton to miss the cut.
How close did Bridgerton season 4 get? Given Netflix hasn’t released the data, we’re left to speculate, as we did a little earlier this year, when we predicted S4 would narrowly miss the all-time list.
So, where do we predict Bridgerton Season 4 will officially end up?
By crunching the numbers from its impressive nine-week run on Netflix’s Global Top 10, we know the season secured a rock-solid baseline of 807.5 million hours viewed, which translates to 90.876 million Complete Viewing Equivalents (CVEs). However, because the show dropped off the public charts before its 91-day timers fully expired, we have to account for the “hidden tail” of viewership. Based on historical decay rates from previous seasons, we estimate the series quietly accumulated an additional 10.87 million hours globally during those final unrecorded weeks. Adding those last few drops in the bucket brings our ultimate prediction for the season to somewhere between 92M and 95M views.
While it’s an undeniably spectacular performance that dominated early 2026, it unfortunately leaves this particular season of the ton roughly 3-6 million views shy of the 98.2 million threshold currently required to crack Netflix’s All-Time Top 10 list. Close but no cigar.
A High Bar to Cross, Franchise Fatigue or Just a Blip?
So, is the Bridgerton hype dying down? Not necessarily.