The Complete ‘My Fault: London’ Trilogy in Order — What’s Streaming and What’s Still Coming

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If you have been anywhere near Prime Video’s romance section recently, chances are you have already fallen down the Noah and Nick rabbit hole. The ‘My Fault: London’ series has become one of the platform’s most talked-about franchises, blending forbidden step-sibling drama with a distinctly British edge that sets it apart from its wildly successful Spanish predecessor.

The trilogy is an English-language reimagining of the Spanish ‘Culpa Mía’ films, which are themselves based on the bestselling Culpables novels by author Mercedes Ron. The collaboration between Prime Video and Mercedes Ron is now officially known as The House of Ron, and the Culpables trilogy in its original form has reached over 100 million viewers worldwide. That kind of global appetite made a British remake not just a creative choice, but a smart one.

The ‘My Fault: London’ Watch Order

For anyone ready to dive in, here is the full chronological viewing order for the ‘My Fault: London’ series on Prime Video:

  1. ‘My Fault: London’ (2025)
  2. ‘Your Fault: London’ (2026)
  3. ‘Our Fault: London’ (TBA — filming completed)

‘My Fault: London’ was released on Amazon Prime Video on February 13, 2025, and was directed by Dani Girdwood and Charlotte Fassler, with a screenplay by Melissa Osborne. The film stars Asha Banks as Noah and Matthew Broome as Nick, and carries an IMDb rating of 6.2. It runs approximately two hours and is available to stream with a standard Prime membership.

‘Your Fault: London’ followed as the second installment and was digitally released on Amazon Prime Video on June 17, 2026, with Girdwood and Fassler returning to direct and Banks and Broome both reprising their lead roles. It is currently streaming in more than 240 countries and territories worldwide. As for the third film, multiple sources confirmed that ‘Our Fault: London’ was shot back-to-back with ‘Your Fault: London’, meaning production has already wrapped on the final chapter.

Where ‘My Fault: London’ Began

The first film follows 18-year-old Noah, who moves from Florida to London after her mother marries a wealthy businessman. She meets her new stepbrother Nick, and although the two immediately clash, their relationship slowly transforms into a powerful romantic attraction. The film smartly updates the premise for a British setting, swapping Malibu mansions for London townhouses and underground racing scenes that feel right at home in the city’s gritty east end.

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While ‘Culpa Mía’ is considered more faithful to the source material, ‘My Fault: London’ takes some creative liberties, most noticeably dialing down some of the toxicity in Noah and Nick’s relationship. That softer tone proved to be a calculated decision that paid off, earning the film a passionate following among younger Prime Video audiences. The film premiered globally on Prime Video on February 13, 2025 and is available to stream with a Prime membership.

‘Your Fault: London’ Ups the Drama Considerably

In the sequel, Nick and Noah face the ultimate test of their love as Noah embarks on her new life at Oxford University while Nick remains in London, working for his father’s company, separated by distance and surrounded by mounting pressures including jealousy, ambition, and forces determined to tear them apart. It is exactly the kind of second-act shakeup that fans of the genre have come to expect, and early audience reactions suggest it delivers on every level.

Joining the returning cast are several new faces, with Louisa Binder playing Sophia, described as a beautiful and ambitious young woman who sets her sights on Nick when she starts working at Leister Enterprises, while Joel Nankervis plays Michael, a confident and patient Oxford student who forms an immediate friendship with Noah while secretly wanting more.

Scarlett Rayner steps in as Briar, a seemingly sweet but quietly strategic friend Noah meets at Oxford, and Orlando Norman plays Cruz, Ronnie’s right-hand man in the underground racing scene.

A UK red-carpet premiere was held at Cineworld Leicester Square in London on June 11, 2026, and two days later Prime Video hosted a global livestream from the event featuring leads Asha Banks and Matthew Broome in conversation with fans. The buzz surrounding that premiere event confirmed that this franchise has built genuine cultural heat, not just passive streaming numbers.

What We Know About ‘Our Fault: London’

The third and final film in the series, ‘Our Fault: London’, is the one fans are already counting down to. When the original ‘My Fault: London’ was released, Prime Video gave the green light for both ‘Your Fault: London’ and ‘Our Fault: London’, and the latter was filmed back-to-back with the second installment under director Chanya Button. The directorial change for the final chapter adds an interesting new creative dimension to what is already a well-established world.

Given Prime Video’s track record with its romance-centered films, there is a strong chance the third movie could arrive in early 2027 or perhaps even surprise audiences with a late 2026 release. ‘Our Fault: London’ will adapt the last book in Mercedes Ron’s Culpables trilogy, bringing Nick and Noah’s story to its conclusion. Whether that ending is as emotionally satisfying as fans are hoping remains to be seen, but the groundwork has clearly been laid with care.

The ‘My Fault: London’ adaptation has done a relatively admirable job of ensuring that whatever unravels between Nick and Noah, none of it is too toxic to the point of no return, making the couple easier to root for as the trilogy heads toward its finale. That is precisely the kind of storytelling balance that turns a film series into a genuine event franchise, and right now this one is firing on all cylinders.

If you have already watched ‘My Fault: London’ and sprinted straight through to ‘Your Fault: London’, we want to know — are you on Team Nick or do you think Noah deserves better, and how are you holding up after that ending?

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