Metascore
57

Mixed or average reviews - based on 11 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 2 out of 11
  2. Negative: 0 out of 11

Critic Reviews

  1. Reviewed by: Joel Keller
    Jun 10, 2026
    60
    There’s nothing revolutionary or even unique about Every Year After. But the cast is charming enough and the setting is pictureseque enough to make the show a pleasant distraction for fans of romantic dramas.
  2. Reviewed by: Lacy Baugher
    Jun 10, 2026
    40
    “Every Year After” is a deeply frustrating watch for many reasons, but mostly because it so clearly didn’t have to be this way. There are moments sprinkled throughout the show’s eight episodes that hint at something deeper, richer, and more emotionally complex underneath all the unnecessary narrative flourishes, plot padding, and pacing problems.
  3. Reviewed by: Liz Hersey
    Jun 9, 2026
    60
    Soverall and Cornett don't quite have the chemistry to anchor the show, and as revelations and betrayals come to light, a somewhat heel turn from Sam makes him and Percy even less shippable as a couple. They don't sink the show completely, though, and Every Year After stays afloat thanks to its much more interesting supporting characters.
  4. Reviewed by: Sarah Dempster
    Jun 10, 2026
    60
    There are no huge surprises and several gifted actors seem to be locked in an interminable WWE cage match with a script that requires them to say things that no human should ever be required to utter (“Adulting is no joke!”). But oh, the lake!
  5. Reviewed by: Angie Han
    Jun 9, 2026
    40
    The connection between the two leads is most charming in the early tween years. .... But Every Year After is full of undercooked details that get brought up only as an excuse to bring its would-be lovers together or pull them back apart, and then get discarded when they’re no longer needed for that purpose.
  6. Reviewed by: Ben Dowell
    Jun 10, 2026
    60
    There isn’t anything to truly despise about this nostalgia fest of young love, blanket-wrapped heart-to-hearts, sunlit skies and lakeside swims that are really just excuses for many close-ups of Charlie (Michael Bradway) and Sam’s torsos. But, fairly faithfully adapted from Carley Fortune’s 2022 novel Every Summer After, this Prime Video series does feel cynical.
  7. Reviewed by: Peter Travers
    Jun 12, 2026
    60
    Six summers to fall in love. One moment to fall apart. A weekend to get it right—Carley Fortune’s bestseller is now a YA series for romantics of all ages, especially those who never got over the loss of “The Summer I Turned Pretty.”
  8. Reviewed by: Marah Eakin
    Jun 9, 2026
    40
    Despite all its bonafides, everything about “Every Year After” just feels decidedly uninspired. The settings are lovely but the story is rote and predictable. Spread out over eight almost too flimsy episodes.
  9. Reviewed by: John Anderson
    Jun 10, 2026
    60
    It offers eternal love, betrayal, regret and redemption, in earnest if not always logical fashion. .... Where the writers were, as they wrote the dialogue, is another question. Space? .... The most charming aspect here is the portrayal of a couple of kids, the young Percy and Sam.