Picture Credit: Netflix
The Straw Hats are heading to the desert. Following the massive success of Season 2 in March 2026, Netflix’s live-action adaptation of Eiichiro Oda’s beloved manga is officially gearing up for its biggest adventure yet. From filming dates and cast additions to the official title and a massive budget, here is your comprehensive preview of everything we know so far about One Piece Season 3 as of mid-2026, ahead of the series planned wrap in late June 2026.
If you’ve been following our coverage here at What’s on Netflix, you know that One Piece has defied all the “live-action anime curse” odds to become one of Netflix’s flagship properties. Following Season 2’s highly anticipated release on March 10, 2026, which quickly shot to #1 worldwide with nearly 17 million views in its first week. It ultimately spent five weeks in the global top 10s, amassing 320.7M viewing hours, equating to 39.5M views. This was notably down on season 1, but not disaster territory by any stretch.
With creator Eiichiro Oda himself recently taking a trip to the set to check on the progress, let’s dive into everything you need to know about the upcoming third season:
Why Season 3 of One Piece Wasn’t a Huge Surprise When Renewed
Officially, One Piece wasn’t renewed by Netflix until August 10, 2025. However, anyone who followed our extensive reporting on One Piece will know that the series was likely renewed months before the official announcement was made. It was arguably the world’s worst-kept secret, as multiple actors had been on record discussing the third season, not to mention once it was confirmed that season 2 would only cover up to Drum Island and Joe Manganiello already cast as Crocodile, it was always a matter of when and not if Netflix renewed for a third season.
There has been a slight changing of the guard at the top. Joe Tracz, who came aboard to co-showrun Season 2 alongside Steven Maeda, is returning to the helm. However, he is now joined by Ian Stokes, who takes over co-showrunning duties following the departure of Matt Owens. Tracz serves as executive producer alongside Elizabeth Hunter and Ashley Wigfield. The writing staff is rounded out by story editor Alex Regnery and staff writer Mateja Bozicevic per the WGA.
What is the official title for One Piece Season 3?
Netflix isn’t just calling it “Season 3.” As we’ve learned, the streaming service has officially titled the upcoming installment One Piece: The Battle of Alabasta. This makes perfect sense given that the entirety of the season will be dedicated to adapting this massive, fan-favorite saga from the manga, paying off the Baroque Works storyline that has been bubbling in the background since Season 1.
When will One Piece Season 3 be on Netflix?
We’ve got some good news and some bad news. The good news is that Season 3 is officially happening and filming right now. The bad news is that you’re going to be waiting a while.
Netflix has officially confirmed a 2027 release window for Season 3.
While we don’t have an exact month just yet, we’ve been doing the math based on previous production timelines. Factoring in an extensive post-production period for the visual effects, a Summer 2027 release (around July or August) is currently the best estimate.
Where is Season 3 in production? (And an update from Oda!)
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Filming for One Piece: The Battle of Alabasta is currently underway! The cast and crew have returned to Cape Town, South Africa.
Operating under the working title “Project Arcadia”, cameras officially started rolling on November 24, 2025. This is going to be a massive shoot—spanning over 200 days—with production currently scheduled to wrap up around June or July 2026 (latest we hear is late June).
Picture Credit: Netflix
Co-showrunner Joe Tracz recently revealed that they are utilizing three separate production units to get everything done. Two units are filming drama and large-scale spectacle simultaneously, while a third unit is entirely dedicated to the complex stunt work.
Bringing the Grand Line to life isn’t cheap. The series continues to have a huge budget for Netflix, with sources telling us that each episode costs around $18 million. To put that into perspective, that budget rivals major cinematic television events like Game of Thrones and Stranger Things, ensuring that the heavy VFX needed for Sand Devil Fruit powers and massive civil war battles will look spectacular.
The biggest update, however, comes straight from the creator himself. Eiichiro Oda recently visited the Cape Town set (hilariously spotted in a behind-the-scenes video wearing his signature fish mask to hide his face). In a recent author comment in Weekly Shonen Jump (translated), Oda gave the new season high praise:
“I went to Cape Town!! It looks like Season 3 of the live-action series is going to have some incredible visuals, too!! I’m looking forward to it!!”
From manga panels to a real desert kingdom. Oda-sensei witnessing it all. The Battle of Alabasta begins.
pic.twitter.com/c6s1ciYWiS
— ONE PIECE(ワンピース) Netflix (@onepiecenetflix) May 27, 2026
What to expect from the plot of Season 3 (and yes, there will be creatures!)
If Season 2 was about getting the crew together and entering the Grand Line, Season 3 is about all-out war.
Here is the official synopsis provided by Netflix:
“War is coming for Monkey D. Luffy and the Straw Hat crew in the desert kingdom of Alabasta, Princess Vivi’s homeland. A rebellion threatens to tear the nation apart, fueled in secret by one of the Seven Warlords of the Sea, the ruthless Sir Crocodile, and his underground syndicate Baroque Works, who seek to conquer Alabasta for themselves. In a season defined by unbreakable bonds and impossible choices, the Straw Hats must face a brewing civil war and a powerful warlord to save Vivi’s kingdom before it crumbles into the sand.”
Fans on Reddit have also been piecing together musical clues. A track from Season 2 titled “In Alabasta We Ride Ducks” basically guarantees that the Supersonic Duck Squad is making its live-action debut. Showrunner Joe Tracz previously confirmed that fan-favorite creatures like Karoo (Vivi’s riding duck) and the Kung Fu Dugongs are officially in the show, noting that “One Piece without creatures would be a very boring show.”
We’ve covered this in depth, but assuming the entirety of the Arabasta Arc is covered, that’d mean Netflix is closing in 20% of the manga/anime being covered.
| Arc | Manga Chapters | Anime Episodes |
|---|---|---|
| Arabasta Arc | 155-217 | 92-130 |
Future arcs yet to be covered include:
| Saga | Manga Chapters | Anime Episodes |
|---|---|---|
| Sky Island Saga | 218-302 | 136-206 |
| Water 7 Saga | 303-441 | 207-325 |
| Thriller Bark Saga | 442-489 | 326-384 |
| Summit War Saga | 490-597 | 385-516 |
| Fish-Man Island Saga | 598-653 | 516-574 |
| Dressrosa Saga | 654-801 | 575-746 |
| Whole Cake Island Saga | 802-908 | 747-889 |
| Wano Country Saga | 909-1057 | 890-1085 |
| “Final Saga” | 1058- Ongoing | 1086- Ongoing |
Who is in the cast for One Piece Season 3?
Let’s start with the returning faces. The core Straw Hat crew is all back:
- Iñaki Godoy as Monkey D. Luffy
- Emily Rudd as Nami
- Mackenyu as Roronoa Zoro
- Jacob Romero as Usopp
- Taz Skylar as Sanji
- Mikaela Hoover as Tony Tony Chopper
- Charithra Chandran as Princess Vivi
Also returning from their Season 2 introductions are the heavy hitters of the Alabasta saga:
- Joe Manganiello as Crocodile (Mr. 0)
- Lera Abova as Nico Robin (Miss All Sunday)
- Callum Kerr as Smoker
- Sendhil Ramamurthy as King Cobra
But what about the new cast members? Netflix has lined up some incredible talent for Season 3:
- Xolo Maridueña as Portgas D. Ace: The internet’s favorite fancast has officially come true. The Cobra Kai and Blue Beetle star steps into the iconic role of Luffy’s fire-wielding older brother.
- Cole Escola as Bon Clay (Mr. 2): In what might be the best casting of the entire series, Tony Award-winning non-binary actor Cole Escola (Oh, Mary!) will play the flamboyant, shape-shifting assassin Mr. 2.
- Awdo Awdo as Mr. 1: Playing Crocodile’s lethal, blade-bodied right-hand man.
- Daisy Head as Miss Doublefinger: The Shadow and Bone alum returns to Netflix as Mr. 1’s ruthless partner.




How long will One Piece run for on Netflix?
The debate about how long the series will last is still pretty contentious. Recently, there were tons of reports that the series would run for 12 seasons, which would be unprecedented, as it’d be Netflix’s longest-running show of all time. The rumor stems from older 2023 interviews where producers Marty Adelstein and Becky Clements expressed their “hopes” to adapt the entire manga over 12 seasons. However, realistically, with two-year gaps between seasons and a cast that is actively aging, a 12-season plan taking the show into the 2040s is highly unlikely.
Instead, insiders suggest a much more realistic internal roadmap is an 8-season plan, which would smartly conclude the live-action series just before the manga’s famous Time Skip although viewership will need to stay strong for that to become reality.
In the meantime… Get ready for LEGO One Piece (and The One Piece)!
Can’t wait until 2027 for more Straw Hat content? Netflix has you covered.
Hitting the streamer on September 29, 2026, is a brand new two-part animated special titled LEGO One Piece. Animated by Atomic Cartoons, the special serves as a fun, blocky recap of Seasons 1 and 2. The special is told through the eyes of Usopp, who acts as an unreliable narrator spinning wildly exaggerated versions of their adventures to Chopper. It’s designed to be a family-friendly holdover with a different voice cast from the live-action series.
That’s in addition to Netflix being the streaming home to the remake of the anime, with February 2027 being the date window set for The One Piece. We’re getting a big first look at the Annecy Film Festival in late June.
Note: This is an update of our previous ” Everything We Know ” published back in March.
Are you looking forward to One Piece: The Battle of Alabasta? What do you think of the new cast additions and that massive $18 million budget? Let us know in the comments down below!
