Leverage - Season 3 Apr 2026
Season 3 is at its most ambitious. It retains the "Robin Hood" wish fulfillment that fans love while proving the show can handle a sophisticated, serialized story. It’s the perfect blend of lighthearted fun and genuine tension.
The season kicks off with Nate Ford in prison, but he isn’t there for long. The overarching narrative introduces —a shadowy, international financier of crime and terrorism. Unlike previous antagonists, Moreau is a legitimate global threat, forcing the team to work under the thumb of a mysterious "Italian" (played by Elisabetta Canalis) to take him down. What Works
Season 3 of is widely considered the point where the series hits its stride, balancing its "heist-of-the-week" roots with a more cohesive, high-stakes seasonal arc . The Premise: The Italian Job Leverage - Season 3
Having a season-long villain gives the episodes more weight. Every small con feels like a necessary step toward the final confrontation in San Lorenzo.
From a high-pressure con inside a mall during Christmas ("The Ho Ho Ho Job") to a heist involving a "stolen" symphony, the writing remains sharp, clever, and fun. Season 3 is at its most ambitious
By now, the cast (Hutton, Kane, Hodge, Riesgraf, and Bellman) has effortless chemistry. Their bickering feels like a family dynamic, which anchors the show’s more over-the-top moments. What Could Be Better
This season dives deeper into the team's internal lives. We see Parker beginning to understand social cues (and her feelings for Hardison), and Eliot’s dark past is frequently teased, adding layers to the "muscle." The season kicks off with Nate Ford in
If you aren’t a fan of the "plan goes wrong, but it was actually part of the plan" trope, the formula might start to feel predictable by the middle of the season. Final Verdict: 8.5/10