Jeremy Clarkson Hints at Two More Seasons of Clarkson’s Farm as Future Plans Take Shape
Jeremy Clarkson has hinted strongly that Clarkson’s Farm could continue beyond its upcoming fifth run, revealing that not one but two further ideas are already being discussed for the Amazon series.
The 65-year-old broadcaster took on the challenge of running a working farm in 2019, having purchased around 1,000 acres of land near Chadlington and Chipping Norton in Oxfordshire more than a decade earlier. What began as a personal experiment soon developed into Clarkson’s Farm, a programme that has since attracted a global audience and become one of Amazon Prime Video’s most successful factual shows.
With millions of viewers worldwide, the series is preparing to return for its fifth season in May. Until recently, there had been speculation that this instalment might mark the end of the project, particularly after the production team took an extended break from filming.
However, speaking to The Sun, Clarkson suggested that those assumptions may have been premature. He confirmed that discussions around a sixth series are already well advanced and that filming could begin again sooner than expected.
“We’ll definitely do six – Amazon want to and I want to,” he said, adding that creative momentum was far from exhausted. “I’ve got a good idea for six. I said I’ll stop doing them when there are no more ideas. But I’ve got two quite good ones, so we’ll do six and then we’ll see.”
Clarkson also addressed the brief pause in filming that fuelled rumours of an ending, explaining that the demands of both farming and other professional commitments had made a short break unavoidable. Farming, he noted, offers little opportunity to step away entirely, as each season flows directly into the next.
“We’ve never had a rest,” he said. “You wrap a series and immediately start again because farming doesn’t stop. You harvest and you immediately start drilling for the next year.”
This time, circumstances aligned differently. Clarkson revealed that Kaleb Cooper, a central figure in the series, had travelled to Australia for filming, while Clarkson himself had been working on Millionaire Hot Seat. He also admitted that the relentless pace of recent years had left little room for personal downtime.
“I really wanted to have a holiday because I haven’t had one in ages,” he explained. “So we just said, let’s actually wrap it.”
Yet even that pause may prove temporary. With snowfall settling across Chipping Norton and parts of the Oxfordshire Cotswolds over the past week — and more forecast later in the week — Clarkson suggested that the weather itself could provide the cue to resume filming.
“I just said, ‘If it snows we’ll start filming again,’” he added.
According to The Sun, there is even early talk that the programme could extend to a seventh series, underlining Amazon’s confidence in the format and Clarkson’s continued enthusiasm for documenting the realities of modern farming.
While no official confirmation has been made beyond series six, Clarkson’s comments suggest that Clarkson’s Farm remains very much an ongoing project, with future seasons likely to continue blending humour, hard-earned lessons, and the everyday pressures faced by farmers across the UK.


