Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 Release Schedule Revealed — Here’s When Every Episode Hits Disney+
Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 is nearly here—Disney has unveiled the full Disney+ release schedule, laying out when every new episode lands.
If you've been sitting around wondering when Matt Murdock would finally get back in the suit, good news: Marvel is ready to dump the full 2026 release roadmap for 'Daredevil: Born Again' season 2. So if you're one of the seriously patient ones (and, honestly, at this point, you'd have to be), let's get into the nitty-gritty of when you'll actually be able to hit play.
When is Daredevil Back?
Disney+ dropped a handy-dandy graphic (because, apparently, nothing says 'appointment television' like infographics), laying out when each episode will hit the streamer. Here's the headline: season 2 launches Tuesday, March 24, 2026, and then just keeps rolling out on Tuesdays like clockwork, always at 6 p.m. PT.
And, for once, they're doing something a little different: the second and third episodes will actually drop the following week at the same time. Not exactly a binger's buffet, but hey, at least you're not parsing it out one slow drip at a time (unless you count the rest of the season).
Here's the Schedule:
- March 24, 2026: Episode 1
- March 31, 2026: Episodes 2 & 3 together
- April 7–28, 2026: One new episode each Tuesday (that's Episodes 4–7)
- May 5, 2026: Season finale (Episode 8)
The week after the finale, Marvel is dropping 'The Punisher: One Last Kill'—because apparently, they want your spring 2026 to be wall-to-wall murdery vigilantes with Catholic guilt.
Who's Coming Back (and Who's New)?
In case you've lost the thread over the last, oh, decade or so of Marvel TV shenanigans, the cast is stacked:
Returning:
Charlie Cox is back in the horned suit as Matt Murdock. Vincent D'Onofrio is still hulking out as Kingpin. And yes, Jon Bernthal is officially on the scene as Frank Castle/Punisher. (Guess why that spinoff is perfectly timed.)
A lot of old faces are also returning: Ayelet Zurer as Vanessa Fisk, Deborah Ann Woll as Karen Page, and some newer supporting cast—Margarita Levieva (Heather), Genneya Walton (BB Urich), Nikki M. James (Kirsten), Clark Johnson (Cherry), and Michael Gandolfini (Daniel).
New this season: Lili Taylor (from 'The Conjuring', yes, really) shows up as the governor of New York. But the wild casting swing? Matthew Lillard—yes, 'Scream' and 'Five Nights at Freddy's' guy—as Mr. Charles, who is apparently on Kingpin's level when it comes to power (according to Marvel "creative" Brad Winderbaum). If you're picturing Lillard as some cackling newsy baddie, you're not alone.
Behind the Scenes
Dario Scardapane is running the show, along with the Marvel brain trust: Kevin Feige, Louis D'Esposito, Brad Winderbaum and company are glued to the executive producer chairs as usual.
Marvel already confirmed a season 3 renewal—so even before season 2 drops, they're locking this down for another round.
Marvel's Long Game
This release pattern is another reminder that Marvel is still obsessed with drawing these things out over months—and daring you to remember plot beats week-to-week. If you're a diehard, your calendar is probably already marked. If you're a casual: yes, you'll have to wait til May to see how it ends. Or, you know, just binge it after.
– Brad Winderbaum, Marvel Studios
In summary: you have roughly two years to speculate, debate, and possibly forget all about this before opening credits hit. But hey, at least now you know when to set your reminders.