Overview
After spending two seasons giving viewers a glimpse at life when dinosaurs roamed the earth, Prehistoric Planet is getting icy with its just-announced third run. When the acclaimed natural-history series returns in November 2025, it's saying goodbye to Tyrannosaurus rex and its fellow dinos, and hello to woolly mammoths and snow sloths instead — and hi to sabre-toothed tigers and three-feet-tall dwarf elephants as well.
Prehistoric Planet: Ice Age is also giving its megafauna-filled trip to the past a new voice. Just a few years ago, no one knew that they needed to hear David Attenborough talk about dinosaurs while watching spectacular photo-realistic recreations of the planet's ancient creatures — and then this series arrived. Attenborough returned for the second season, too. Next up, however, Tom Hiddleston (Loki) is loaning his vocal tones to narrating Prehistoric Planet's third go-around.
This docuseries, which proved one of 2022's best new shows when it premiered, has always worked a particular type of magic: letting viewers peer backwards in time to the planet's past thanks to its impressive photorealistic special effects. Prehistoric Planet: Ice Age is deploying its approach to a frozen world, to spend time with the animals of its titular period, including across a variety of terrain, and through the big freeze and the big melt.
While there's no Attenborough, Hans Zimmer is still providing the original score, aided by Anže Rozman and Kara Talve from Bleeding Fingers Music. And filmmaker Jon Favreau — who has used the same type of visuals on The Jungle Book and The Lion King — remains an executive producer, as does BBC Studios Natural History Unit's Mike Gunton.
While audiences only had to wait a year between the first and second seasons of Prehistoric Planet, more than two-year gap will have passed between season two and Ice Age when the latter starts streaming its five-episode stint via Apple TV+ from Tuesday, November 26, 2025.
In 2024, Prehistoric Planet Immersive also added to the franchise with two short episodes of five minutes and under, but only via Apple Vision Pro.
There's no trailer yet for Prehistoric Planet: Ice Age, but check out the sneak peeks for season one and season two below:
Prehistoric Planet: Ice Age will hit Apple TV+ from Tuesday, November 26, 2025. Read our full reviews of Prehistoric Planet season one and Prehistoric Planet season two, as well as our interview with executive producer Mike Gunton and series producer Tim Walker.
