With the leap from spring into summer, HGTV fans will get a whole new crop of fresh shows featuring their favorite stars, from David Bromstad to the “Property Brothers.”
Here’s EntertainmentNOW’s summer 2025 update on every new or returning program that is currently airing or about to premiere. You’ll also find which shows are back to filming — and those that have been put on the back burner or officially canceled.
New Summer 2025 Seasons of HGTV Shows Already Underway
“Ugliest House in America” Season 6 — Mondays at 9 p.m. & 9:30 p.m. Eastern time
Retta is back with her hilarious takes on the “ugliest” homes she can find across the nation, ranking each and awarding the worst one of the season with a $150,000 makeover overseen by longtime HGTV star Alison Victoria. The new season premiered on June 2 with back-to-back episodes each Monday night. The one-hour season finale is slated for June 30. But good news, fans — Retta’s “Scariest House in America” is coming back this fall and HGTV has already renewed “Ugliest House” for another season coming in 2026.
“Down Home Fab” Season 3 — Tuesdays at 10 p.m. Eastern time
Chelsea and Cole DeBoer returned for a third season on May 27, chronicling their family and renovation adventures in South Dakota. But the couple announced on June 17 that their airtime had changed to Tuesdays at 10 p.m. The new season will air in that time slot through July 15.
“Holmes Family Rescue” Season 3 — Wednesdays at 9 p.m. Eastern time
Longtime HGTV star and Canadian contractor Mike Holmes returned on June 4 with his kids and co-stars, renovation experts Sherry Holmes and Michael Holmes Jr. The show aired for two seasons in 2022 and 2023. Now, they’re back with eight new episodes, per HGTV, determined to “make it right” — Mike’s trademark slogan — “for homeowners who have fallen victim to careless or dishonest contractors.”
“House Hunters” — 5 Nights a Week at 10 p.m. Eastern time
You can find reruns of the perennial favorite during many late evening hours, but HGTV airs a brand-new episode of “House Hunters” every Saturday through Thursday night at 10 p.m. Eastern time.
HGTV Shows Set to Premiere in Summer 2025 (Updated July 16)

“Rehab Addict” Season 9 — Premiering June 24 at 9 p.m. Eastern time
Two years after Nicole Curtis last appeared on HGTV in her three-episode spinoff, “Rehab Addict: Lake House Rescue,” the restoration is back with a new four-episode season of “Rehab Addict.” According to HGTV’s synopsis of the new season, she’s now “fighting to save two derelict properties that are 1,500 miles apart. In Wyoming, Nicole will take on an 1890s house subjected to a bad flip. In her hometown of Detroit, she’ll purchase one of the dirtiest abandoned homes she’s ever seen.” Note: While two episodes aired, Curtis has since said the other two episodes will air in the fall.
“Celebrity IOU” New Episodes — Premiering July 9 at 8 p.m. Eastern time
Starring “Property Brothers” Drew and Jonathan Scott, six new episodes of “Celebrity IOU” feature the twins partnering with a different celebrity in each episode, helping them renovate a space for someone they love. The first episode on July 9 features “Superman” actress Rachel Brosnahan, followed by episodes with renovations conducted with supermodel and entrepreneur Tyra Banks, movie actor and Broadway star Josh Gad, Emmy Award-winning actress and producer Jane Seymour, three-time Olympic gold medalist Shaun White, and comedian Joel McHale.
“Chasing the West” New Series — DELAYED to July 30 at 9 p.m. Eastern time
The next night, the Scott brothers are back in a brand new series that takes the twins on the road — to ranches in Arizona, California, and Texas. This gives them a chance to tap into their upbringing on a ranch in Canada (who knew!?). Across eight episodes of “Chasing the West,” the duo will “help families who wish to escape hectic city life or own land discover the incredible attributes and unique challenges of ranch living, including adapting to a slower pace, tending livestock and growing produce,” per HGTV.
“My Lottery Dream Home” Season 18 — Premiering July 18 at 9 p.m. Eastern time
David Bromstad’s rabid fandom will only have to go a few weeks without new episodes (phew!). “My Lottery Dream Home” will be back with new episodes on July 18, as he helps lottery winners look for dream properties across the country, including in Florida, Arizona, New Jersey, and Las Vegas. In the first episode of the season, per HGTV, Bromstad will help a Boston couple who’ve won the lottery a second time! They won a million dollars in 2006, and nearly two decades later, they won $25 million on a $50 lottery scratcher. As they prepare to buy homes for each of their adult kids, Bromstad will help them search for a “family hub” in Atlanta.
“Zillow Gone Wild” Season 2 — Premiering July 18 at 9:30 p.m. Eastern time
Thanks to huge ratings for its first season, “Zillow Gone Wild” is back — as is host Jack McBrayer, famous for his hilarious roles in comedies like “30 Rock” and “Wreck It Ralph.” His show will air right after “My Lottery Dream Home” on Friday nights, chronicling his adventures as he meets “the characters who have embraced non-traditional homes” found on the Zillow real estate website, per HGTV. Each space he tours is then ranked on its unique traits, and one house per episode is named the “wildest” of them all. This season, HGTV says, McBrayer’s “real estate explorations will reveal more opulent and eccentric properties than before, including an entire old western town purchased by an adventurous family in Colorado and a real-life Lego castle listing in Orlando.”
“Renovation Resort Showdown” — Premiering July 22 at 9 p.m. Eastern time
Canadian pals Scott McGillivray and Bryan Baeumler are back to “oversee a fresh crew of elite renovators ready to hammer it out for glory in a new season.” According to a press release, the four competing duos will have eight weeks and a $150,000 budget to design their houses create the “ultimate destination resort.” McGillivray and Baeumler, along with rotating guest judges, will choose a weekly winner and the duo who wins in the end takes home a $100,000 cash prize.
“Bargain Block” Season 4 Remaining Episodes — Premiering August 20
According to star Keith Bynum, the final episodes of season four — and of the series (see below) — will begin airing on August 20, which is also his co-star and partner Evan Thomas’ birthday.
Which HGTV Shows Have Been Canceled or Remain Up in the Air? (Updated on July 16)

Many HGTV fans were heartbroken to learn from “Bargain Block” star Keith Bynum that after four seasons, the show is not likely to return for fifth season. In his Instagram Stories on June 17, Bynum said that while a fifth season was initially greenlit in December 2024, HGTV decided in February not to move ahead. The network has not responded to EntertainmentNow’s request for comment.
On June 23, longtime HGTV contractor Izzy Battres, who appeared for years on “Flip or Flop” and starred in his own family’s show “Izzy Does It” in February, informed fans that his series had not been renewed for a second season.
On June 24, Egypt Sherrod and Mike Jackson also revealed that HGTV had opted not to renew their show, “Married to Real Estate,” after four seasons.
New Kids on the Block member Jonathan Knight disclosed via social media on June 25 that HGTV also decided not to renew his show, “Farmhouse Fixer” for a fourth season, shocking many fans.
On the July 1 edition of Alison Victoria’s podcast, she revealed that “Battle on the Beach,” her show with Ty Pennington and Taniya Nayak, had also not been renewed after four seasons.
Also in early July, HGTV quietly pulled Drew and Jonathan Scott’s “Don’t Hate Your House with the Property Brothers” from its schedule. Originally scheduled to premiere on July 30, a press release now says the show has been postponed until later in 2025.
On July 15, Us Weekly was first to report that, according to a source, Tarek and Heather Rae El Moussa’s “The Flipping El Moussas” had been canceled after two seasons and Christina Haack’s “Christina on the Coast” had been cut after six seasons.
Meanwhile, HGTV has not announced any plans for a second season of “Luxe for Less” despite Michel Boyd Smith making history in May by becoming the only person to win two seasons of “Rock the Block” and a fan-led petition to bring back the show. His teammate, Alison Victoria, has a new spinoff show — “Sin City Rehab” — in the works for later this year.
Worth noting: There has not been any official word about Leslie Davis and Lyndsay Lamb’s “Unsellable Houses.” The twins won season five of “Rock the Block” in 2024 and the season five finale of their show aired in late November, but there’s been no word from them or the network since then on the series’ status.
Also, in a June 12 tribute to HGTV’s head of content Loren Ruch, who died of pneumonia at age 55 after battling acute myeloid leukemia, Veronica Valenica publicly confirmed that her 2023 show “Revealed” was not renewed after one season. She has remained busy behind the scenes working as a design producer for other shows, including “Home Town Takeover.”
Which HGTV Shows Are Filming This Summer?

Although they may not be airing this summer, plenty of other popular HGTV show are filming, with plans to premiere in the fall of 2025 or early 2026.
Jasmine Roth is busy filming her next season of “Help! I Wrecked My House.” For the first time, she’s filming in Utah instead of California, while juggling having two daughters in tow. Brian and Mika Kleinschmidt are also busy filming a new season of “100 Day Dream Home” in Florida, due to premiere in the fall.
Although Erin and Ben Napier are taking time off for their first family trip overseas, they have begun filming a new season of “Home Town” in Laurel, Mississippi. The same goes for Dave and Jenny Marrs, who will take an overseas vacation with their kids this summer in between filming new episodes of “Fixer to Fabulous,” they told EntertainmentNow this spring.
In addition, HGTV did announce one new show with a working title of “Junk or Jackpot” starring former “Queer Eye” star Bobby Berk will premiere in late 2025.
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Every HGTV Show Premiering in Summer 2025 & Which Shows Won’t Be Back: UPDATED