Prime Video unveils its June 2026 lineup, showcasing an impressive array of content that caters to a wide range of tastes. This month, the platform has excelled in delivering noteworthy options across multiple genres, ensuring there’s something for everyone. With a diverse selection that stands out from typical offerings, viewers will find plenty to engage with and enjoy.
The significance of this lineup cannot be overlooked. June often serves as a strategic time for platforms to highlight their strongest originals before the summer slowdown. Prime Video appears to have fully embraced this trend, providing several new releases in the first few weeks that promise to meet various viewing preferences. This month’s collection reflects a commitment to quality and variety, setting the stage for an exciting viewing experience.
1. Every Year After (June 10) – The Prime Video Shows June Needs Most
Told over the course of six years and one week in Barry’s Bay, the quintessential lake town, Every Year After is a romantic, nostalgic story of first loves and the people and choices that mark us forever. The series is based on the bestselling novel by Carley Fortune, Every Summer After, which spent 16 weeks on the New York Times Bestseller list, has sold over one million copies, and gained massive popularity through BookTok, with the book hashtag accumulating over 81.4 million views on TikTok.
The show follows protagonist Percy, who grew up vacationing in Barry’s Bay, spending all her time with the Florek brothers, Sam and Charlie. What began as a close friendship with the younger brother Sam blossomed into a romance, but something came between them and eventually took Percy far away from Barry’s Bay. The adaptation stars Sadie Soverall, known for Saltburn, and Matt Cornett from High School Musical: The Musical: The Series, as Percy and Sam – the couple at the center of the love story.
Amy B. Harris serves as showrunner and executive producer, with Fortune herself executive producing alongside Lindsey Liberatore, Amy Rardin, John Stephens, and Grace Gilroy. All eight episodes of Every Year After will be released on June 10 on Prime Video. If you have ever stared at a lake and thought about someone you lost track of, this one is going to find you right where you’re sitting.
2. Clarkson’s Farm Season 5 (June 3) – Chaos, Sheep, and One Very Alarming Doctor’s Visit
Clarkson’s Farm is Prime Video’s pastoral series that follows television personality Jeremy Clarkson as he gets to grips with running his Diddly Squat farm in Oxfordshire. The series first debuted on Prime Video in 2021 and quickly gained a huge following, with viewers charmed by the beautiful scenery and the drama that country living can bring, helped along by Clarkson’s total lack of farming experience. Season 5, which arrives this month, is the most dramatic yet.
The narrative direction for the fifth season takes a decidedly serious turn, heavily focusing on Clarkson’s real-life health crisis. The season opener details his emergency hospitalization after suffering a severe heart scare, with doctors discovering a completely blocked artery that required an immediate stent procedure. Beyond that personal medical drama, the operational storylines follow Diddly Squat as it pivots into high-tech farming experiments to combat skyrocketing costs, which notably results in farm manager Kaleb Cooper boarding an airplane for his first-ever trip abroad. The external conflicts center on a devastating bovine tuberculosis outbreak that puts the entire farm under strict quarantine restrictions, all unfolding against the backdrop of massive UK agricultural protests in London.
The popular show will return to screens on June 3 with four episodes, followed by two more on June 10 and the final two on June 17. For anyone who has never watched this show before and is skeptical that a British man yelling at a tractor could be compelling television: you have not watched this show. It is funnier and more unexpectedly moving than most scripted dramas on any platform right now.
3. The Legend of Vox Machina Season 4 (June 3) – The Grown-Up Animation That Earns Every Tear
The acclaimed series, based on the Critical Role Dungeons and Dragons web series, follows an eclectic band of misfit heroes – mercenaries, rogues, and assorted weirdos. Prime Video has become known for adult animated series that do not shy away from intense content, and The Legend of Vox Machina fits squarely into that space. At its core, the show follows a dysfunctional group of adventurers who must rely on one another to survive. While it leans into classic high-fantasy elements like dragons, magic, and monsters, it also puts strong emphasis on the relationships between its characters.
Season 4 will bring the group back together once again to face a new threat. This is the fourth and, according to TV Guide, penultimate season of the series, which means the storytellers are operating with the particular kind of confidence that comes from knowing the end is in sight. There is something about animated fantasy that strips away a lot of the self-consciousness that live-action drama sometimes carries – the characters can be more openly broken, more openly tender, and the world-building can go places live action budgets simply cannot.
If you have teenagers who are already fans, this is one of those rare shows you can watch together without anyone feeling like they have made a compromise. The humor is bone-dry, the action is genuinely stunning, and the emotional beats hit harder than they should for a show featuring goblins. The fourth season is the penultimate installment of this animated adventure series.
4. See You at Work Tomorrow! (June 22) – K-Drama Romance for People Who Are Tired of People
See You at Work Tomorrow! centers on Cha Ji-yoon, a seventh-year product planner who has sworn off dating after a painful breakup. Burned out from corporate life, she lives for efficiency, deadlines, and one small joy: fried chicken and a brewski after the perfect on-the-dot clock-out. Calm and unflappable on the surface, her heart has long been closed – until Kang Si-woo, the company’s most avoided team leader, enters her life.
The series tells the story of people who, despite being worn down and heartbroken, still faithfully clock in the next morning. Based on the hit Kakao Webtoon, it blends witty workplace satire with irresistible romantic tension, capturing the heart, humor, and energy of modern workplace romance. The Kakao Webtoon source material gives this one a built-in narrative economy: the pacing is tight, the character dynamics are established with the kind of precision that only comes from a story that has already been loved by millions of readers before a single frame was filmed.
K-drama has a particular gift for making the workplace feel like a contained universe with its own laws, politics, and impossible longing, and this is a premium example of the genre doing what it does best. The show premieres June 22, which means if you time it right, you can finish Every Year After first and have absolutely no intention of doing anything productive for the rest of June.
5. Your Fault: London (June) – Forbidden Love, Glossy Production, New Postcode
Your Fault: London is the sequel to a previous Prime Video film and the second installment in the British take on Mercedes Ron‘s bestselling Culpables trilogy. While the story was previously brought to the screen in a successful Spanish-language film series, this version reimagines it with a new cast and a London setting. Like its predecessor, it leans into a glossy, high-production style, with plenty of tension and complicated relationships at its core.
Noah and Nick find themselves trying to maintain their relationship as their lives begin to pull them in different directions. Noah moves to Oxford to continue her studies, where she meets Michael, a fellow student who quickly becomes a close presence in her new life. The forbidden-love architecture of the original trilogy translates smoothly to a British setting, and the production values are exactly the kind of visual comfort food that summer streaming calls for – all rain-slicked London streets, university libraries, and the specific tension of two people in the same room pretending they are not in the same room.
For fans of the first film in the London series, this is the continuation you have been waiting for. For newcomers, the premise is simple enough to pick up without prior viewing, though going back to watch the first one first will do no harm at all. Prime Video has confirmed Your Fault: London as part of the month’s original slate, with a June release date. Think of it as the palate cleanser between heavier watches, or the main event on a Friday night when you just want to feel something uncomplicated.
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What to Watch First

June is one of those months where the streaming platforms tend to front-load the good stuff and coast on library titles by the end, which makes the first two weeks here particularly valuable. Clarkson’s Farm and The Legend of Vox Machina both arrive on June 3, which is a strong opening salvo for anyone who has been surviving on reruns. Every Year After drops all eight episodes at once on June 10, which is either a gift or a threat depending on your Friday evening plans.
The breadth of this month’s lineup is worth noting. From farming reality to K-drama romance to BookTok adaptations to animated fantasy, these prime video shows in June cover enough ground that there is genuinely something here for every mood, every kind of evening, and every person in your house who controls the remote. The harder question, as always, is not what to watch, but what to save for last.
AI Disclaimer: This article was created with the assistance of AI tools and reviewed by a human editor.