As the fog of Istanbul’s autumn rains lifts over the Bosphorus, Netflix’s addictive Turkish drama Old Money—or Enfes Bir Akşam to its devoted homeland fans—returns with a vengeance that could topple thrones built on deception and desire. Just days after the renewal buzz from mid-November, the official Season 2 trailer has unleashed a torrent of intrigue, centering on Eleanor Hawthorne’s harrowing unmasking of her husband Marcus’s steamy, shadowy affair with a mysterious corporate operative. This illicit liaison doesn’t just fracture a marriage; it teeters the fragile axis of power between the Hawthorne old-money dynasty and their upstart rivals, promising boardroom showdowns that double as emotional gladiatorial arenas. With scandals simmering like Turkish coffee on a samovar, the stakes feel higher than the Galata Tower. And for the faithful who’ve been binge-rewatching Season 1’s tragic finale, relief: the release date is etched in stone—April 10, 2026.

For newcomers dipping into this opulent vortex (and trust me, with 5.8 million global views in its premiere week, you’re in elite company), Old Money is a lavish tapestry of class warfare, forbidden romance, and the kind of betrayals that make Succession look like a family picnic. Season 1, which dropped all six episodes on October 10, 2025, chronicled the seismic collision of worlds when self-made tech whiz Osman Bulut (Engin Akyürek, channeling brooding intensity like a modern-day Ottoman sultan) sets his sights on Nihal Hawthorne (Selin Şekerci, radiant as the silver-spooned siren caught in his web). Their whirlwind courtship exposed the Hawthornes’ gilded facade—textile barons whose empire hides skeletons from the 1980s privatizations—and the Buluts’ ruthless ascent, fueled by Berna’s (a breakout Hande Erçel) secret dalliance with her boss Arda, which nearly derailed their hostile takeover of the Hawthornes’ seaside estate. The finale’s gut-punch—a yacht explosion claiming Osman’s mentor and leaving Nihal’s loyalties in tatters—left fans howling for more, a cry Netflix answered with a swift greenlight on November 13.
The two-minute trailer, premiered exclusively on Netflix’s YouTube channel amid a virtual Tudum extension event, is a masterstroke of tension, directed with the precision of a stiletto heel to the Achilles. It kicks off in the Hawthorne boardroom, all mahogany and malice, where Eleanor (Özge Özpirinçci, elevating her Season 1 supporting turn into a tour de force of quiet fury) pores over encrypted emails on a tablet. Her face, illuminated by the glow of damning screenshots, crumples as grainy photos materialize: Marcus (a steely Burak Özçivit, reprising his role as the Hawthorne heir apparent) entangled in a dimly lit Geneva penthouse with “the Shadow”—a enigmatic woman whose silhouette screams corporate espionage. Whispers in the trailer identify her as Lena Voss, a fictional nod to real-world oligarch fixers, her fingers tracing deal documents that could reroute billions from Hawthorne coffers to offshore havens tied to the Buluts.
“That which you cherish most becomes your undoing,” Eleanor intones in voiceover, her voice cracking like fine porcelain under pressure, as the screen cuts to a montage of fractured facades: Marcus’s evasive glances at family galas, Lena’s gloved hand slipping a USB drive into his briefcase during a clandestine Zurich rendezvous. The affair isn’t mere infidelity; it’s a Trojan horse, laced with insider trading intel that could hand the Buluts control of Istanbul’s waterfront redevelopment—a project that’s been the Hawthornes’ crown jewel since the ’90s. Eleanor’s discovery propels her into a dual-front war: a personal odyssey of rage and reconciliation, mirrored by corporate skirmishes where alliances shift faster than the city’s ferry schedules. One electrifying sequence shows her slamming a crystal decanter across the boardroom table, shards flying as she confronts Marcus: “You bedded the enemy, darling. Now watch her devour us both.” The trailer’s pulse quickens with “boardroom battles and emotional duels,” pitting Eleanor’s calculated poise against Marcus’s unraveling charisma, all underscored by a brooding remix of a traditional ney flute lament.
X exploded in a frenzy of speculation, with #OldMoneyS2Affair spiking to over 300,000 mentions by dawn. “Eleanor’s face when she sees those pics? Chef’s kiss of devastation—Özpirinçci is about to carry this season,” gushed @IstanbulSoapSiren, her thread dissecting the trailer’s symbolism racking up 50k likes. Fan theories ran wild: Is Lena a Bulut plant, or a rogue from the Osman syndicate teased in Episode 5? Does Marcus’s betrayal stem from Season 1’s unresolved debt to Arda, or a deeper Hawthorne curse of philandering patriarchs? A viral TikTok edit synced the Geneva scene to Tarkan’s “Şımarık,” captioning it “When old money meets dirty secrets,” amassing 2 million views and spawning memes of Özçivit’s guilty smirk photoshopped onto historical sultans. Reddit’s r/OldMoneyNetflix lit up with timelines, one top post positing: “This affair isn’t just spicy—it’s the key to unlocking the yacht explosion. Lena was there, pulling strings from the shadows.”
Creator Elif Usman, whose knack for weaving Turkey’s socio-economic scars into soapy splendor earned Old Money an 85% Rotten Tomatoes fresh rating, leans into these layers for Season 2. “Eleanor’s arc is the heart—uncovering Marcus’s affair isn’t about vengeance; it’s about reclaiming power in a world that scripts women as footnotes,” she told Variety in a post-trailer Q&A. Expanding to eight episodes, the season amplifies the “delicate balance of power,” with boardroom set-pieces filmed in a recreated Topkapı Palace annex, blending historical grandeur with modern ruthlessness. Returning stars Akyürek and Şekerci anchor the chaos, but Özpirinçci’s promotion to series regular steals the spotlight, her chemistry with Özçivit crackling like static before a storm. Newcomer Lila Azam Zanganeh joins as Lena, bringing Persian-Dutch gravitas to the “shadowy figure,” her backstory rumored to echo real Turkish expatriate tycoons entangled in European money-laundering probes.
The trailer’s tease of “boardroom battles” delivers visceral thrills: proxy fights over shareholder votes devolve into shouting matches laced with personal barbs, one clip showing Eleanor leaking redacted docs to the press, her wedding ring glinting as she hits “send.” Emotional duels cut deeper—Marcus’s tearful plea in a rain-lashed garden: “It was strategy, El. Love was the casualty.”—hinting at redemption arcs that could either mend or metastasize the rift. Usman’s pen draws from Turkey’s own boardroom lore, like the 2013 Gezi Park clashes repurposed as metaphors for elite infighting, ensuring the drama resonates beyond escapism. “In Istanbul, power isn’t inherited—it’s stolen, one secret at a time,” she quipped.

Critics are already sharpening their quills. The Hollywood Reporter dubbed the trailer “a seductive serpent in the garden of excess,” lauding its fusion of The Crown‘s dynastic dread with Elite‘s sultry sabotage. IndieWire praised the emotional layering: “Eleanor’s journey from dutiful wife to corporate Cersei elevates Old Money from guilty pleasure to genre-defining gut-punch.” With production wrapping principal photography in Berlin’s shadowy alleys—standing in for Geneva’s intrigue—Netflix is betting big on this Turkish export, eyeing it as a successor to Who Is Erin Carter?‘s crossover appeal. Early buzz from Tudum panels suggests crossover potential, with whispers of a Nihal-Osman subplot intersecting Eleanor’s vendetta, turning family feuds into full-scale empire wars.
Yet, for all its glamour, Season 2’s core throbs with raw humanity. Eleanor’s unmasking forces a reckoning: In a society where women like her navigate glass ceilings etched with gold leaf, does exposing the affair liberate or incarcerate? The trailer closes on a haunting tableau—Eleanor alone in the Hawthorne vault, fingering a locket from her wedding day, as Lena’s voice echoes: “Every throne has its whispers.” Cut to black, with the date: April 10, 2026. It’s a promise of catharsis amid carnage, reminding us that in the game of old money, the only true currency is truth—and it’s often poisoned.
As Istanbul’s elite sip raki under chandeliers that hide cameras, Old Money Season 2 beckons like a siren’s call. Stream Season 1 to catch up, stock your meze platter, and prepare for the fallout. Eleanor’s fight isn’t just for her marriage or her legacy—it’s for the soul of a city built on buried affairs. This season won’t just threaten the balance; it’ll shatter it, one clandestine kiss at a time.