It: Welcome to Derry Season 2? Everything We Know
Here's what we know about the future of the HBO series!

The first season of It: Welcome to Derry concluded, leaving behind one certainty and many questions. Pennywise has been imprisoned once again, Derry has achieved a fragile truce, and the final text "Chapter One" made it clear that the story told so far is just the beginning. But the question many viewers are asking is just one: will It: Welcome to Derry have a Season 2?

Will It: Welcome to Derry Season 2 Happen?
Currently, HBO has not yet officially announced the renewal for a second season. However, the lack of formal confirmation does not equate to a definitive stop. The series' creators have repeatedly stated that they conceived Welcome to Derry as a broader narrative project, with a structure already defined for the long term.
Andy Muschietti, along with Barbara Muschietti and Jason Fuchs, has openly spoken about a vision articulated in multiple chapters, designed to explore the different eras of the Evil that plagues Derry.

When Would It: Welcome to Derry Season 2 Be Set?
If the project were to continue, the second season would be set in 1935, exactly 27 years before the events told in Welcome to Derry. A temporal leap consistent with Pennywise's cycle, which periodically reawakens at regular intervals.
This historical period would not be chosen by chance: Derry in the 1930s, marked by the Great Depression, would represent an ideal context to tell a new awakening of the entity, intertwining economic crisis, social tensions, and collective violence.
It: Welcome to Derry Season 2 Plot, Anticipations
The season finale introduced a crucial narrative element: Pennywise perceives time in a non-linear way. Already knowing its future defeat, the creature could try to alter history by striking even further back in time, targeting ancestors and family lines that will, years later, lead to the birth of the Losers' Club. An idea that opens up unsettling scenarios perfectly consistent with Stephen King's mythology.



