Apple has released the full trailer for season five of “For All Mankind,” offering a closer look at the next chapter of its long-running alternate-history space drama. The new season will debut globally on Apple TV+ on Friday, March 27, with one episode at launch followed by weekly installments through May 29. The 10-episode rollout continues the platform’s established release strategy for flagship series.
“For All Mankind” has built its reputation on a speculative premise: what if the space race never ended? Created by Ronald D. Moore, Matt Wolpert, and Ben Nedivi, the show began with a Soviet lunar landing and has since progressed through decades of geopolitical and technological escalation. Season five moves the timeline into the 2010s, several years after the so-called Goldilocks asteroid heist that reshaped the balance of power in orbit and beyond.
In the new season, Happy Valley—the once-isolated outpost on Mars—has developed into a functioning colony with thousands of residents. It now operates as a launch point for deeper solar system missions, signaling a shift from survival to expansion. The trailer suggests rising political tension as Earth-based governments attempt to assert authority over the Red Planet. That friction between Martian settlers and terrestrial institutions appears set to drive much of the season’s conflict.
Returning cast members include Joel Kinnaman, Toby Kebbell, Edi Gathegi, Cynthy Wu, Coral Peña, and Wrenn Schmidt, with Mireille Enos, Costa Ronin, Sean Kaufman, Ruby Cruz, and Ines Asserson joining as new series regulars. The ensemble approach has been central to the show’s structure, with each season introducing generational shifts that mirror its advancing timeline.
As one of the earliest originals on Apple TV+, “For All Mankind” has played a consistent role in defining the service’s science fiction identity. While streaming competition has intensified in recent years, the series remains one of the platform’s longer-running scripted dramas. All four previous seasons are currently available to stream, allowing new viewers to follow the show’s progression from Cold War rivalry to interplanetary settlement.
With season five, the narrative focus appears to be moving beyond exploration toward governance, resource control, and the social dynamics of life off Earth. Whether the series continues to balance character-driven storytelling with large-scale speculative politics will likely shape its reception as it enters its second decade within the show’s timeline.

