“Selling the City,” Netflix’s glamorous New York City spin-off from the Selling Sunset franchise, burst onto screens with high-stakes real estate deals, luxurious Manhattan listings, and plenty of agent drama. Premiering on January 3, 2025, the eight-episode first season followed top Douglas Elliman brokers as they navigated multimillion-dollar sales and personal rivalries in the Big Apple. But nearly a year later, fans are still asking: Is Selling the City Season 2 happening? Here’s everything we know so far.

A Quick Refresher on the Chaos That Was Season 1

Let’s rewind real quick. The show follows Eleonora Srugo and her crew at Douglas Elliman, slinging properties that cost more than most people’s entire bloodline. We’re talking $45 million penthouses with terraces bigger than some apartments, views that make Central Park look like a backyard, and closets that could house a small village. But forget the marble countertops—the real action happened between the agents.

Jade Chan and Eleonora started tight, like sisters who share lip gloss and life advice. Then came the betrayal whispers, the leaked texts, the side-eye at team meetings. By episode five, Jade threw Eleonora’s listing under the bus in a group chat, and the fallout? Messy. Deliciously messy. The finale ended with Jade yelling at producers, threatening lawsuits, and peeling out of the studio like she had a closing in the Hamptons. Netflix never blinked—lawsuit talk died fast—but the tension? Still sizzling.

Fans ate it up. The show climbed Netflix’s Top 10 faster than a bidder at an auction, sitting pretty next to Selling Sunset and Owning Manhattan. People binged it in one night, then begged for more like kids after the last slice of pizza.

Is Selling the City Season 2 happening?

Here’s the deal: Netflix hasn’t said a word. Not a peep. No press release, no teaser, no cryptic emoji from the official account. Typical Netflix move—keep everyone sweating until the last second. But listen close: the Selling franchise loves a sequel. Sunset just dropped season eight. OC got three seasons in two years. Manhattan already renewed. When a show pops off like this, cameras don’t stay cold for long.

Word on the street? Filming might’ve started already. Quietly. Like when your friend says “nothing’s wrong” but their eye twitches. Sources say the team wrapped season one so fast—under a year from pitch to premiere—that Netflix wants to keep the momentum. If they stick to the schedule, expect new episodes by January 2026. Same winter drop, same binge hangover.

TOPICS: Selling the City