‘Black Rabbit’ Tops Netflix’s Most-Watched Shows List This Week As Well: Here Are the Remaining Top 10 Shows
It was a busy stretch on Netflix in the U.S. for the week of September 22–28, 2025, with a mix of buzzy new dramas, limited-series thrillers, unscripted deep dives, returning favorites, and even a live-sports–style entry shaking up the Top 10. From splashy period intrigue and soapy empire-building to true-crime docuseries and a headline-making WWE episode, viewers had plenty to sample.
Below, we’re counting down this week’s 10 most-watched Netflix shows in the United States. Each entry includes quick, useful details—what it’s about, who stars, who created it, and other specifics—so you can decide what to press play on next.
10. ‘Wednesday’ (2022– )

Jenna Ortega leads ‘Wednesday’ as the sharp-tongued sleuth Wednesday Addams, with Season 2 expanding the Nevermore Academy mystery and the Addams family world. The ensemble features Emma Myers, Catherine Zeta-Jones, and others, with Alfred Gough and Miles Millar serving as creators/showrunners and Tim Burton among the directors and executive producers. Recent coverage highlights Ortega’s continued starring turn and producing role in the new season, alongside additions like Steve Buscemi and Christopher Lloyd.
Season 2 rolled out in two parts in 2025 and continues the supernatural detective thread as Wednesday deciphers new threats at Nevermore. Netflix’s official materials provide cast breakdowns and character guides for the latest episodes, useful if you’re jumping in mid-season or returning after a break.
9. ‘Beauty in Black’ (2024– )

Tyler Perry’s drama follows two women whose lives collide across Chicago’s beauty-industry power corridors: dancer Kimmie (Taylor Polidore Williams) and entrepreneur Mallory Bellarie (Crystle Stewart). Season 2 (Part 1) premiered on September 11, 2025, continuing Kimmie’s rise inside the Bellarie family’s Beauty in Black empire, with Ricco Ross returning as Horace Bellarie.
The series is created, directed, and executive produced by Perry for Netflix, with production primarily based at Tyler Perry Studios in Atlanta. A helpful primer and filming-locations explainer, plus Netflix’s renewal and rollout updates, round out the essentials before you start Part 2 later this season.
8. ‘House of Guinness’ (2025– )

Created by Steven Knight, ‘House of Guinness’ dramatizes the 1868 power struggle inside the famed Dublin brewing dynasty after the patriarch’s death. Netflix lists Anthony Boyle, Louis Partridge, and Emily Fairn among the principal cast; Knight (of ‘Peaky Blinders’) steers the series, with Season 1 spanning eight episodes.
Behind the scenes, production involved directors Tom Shankland and Mounia Akl across the season, with filming in Ireland and the U.K. Early cultural debate has been lively—particularly in Irish media—while U.S./U.K. outlets have highlighted its scale and glossy period intrigue.
7. ‘Haunted Hotel’ (2025– )

This 10-episode comedy centers on a single mom who inherits a rundown hotel and discovers she’s sharing it with the helpful ghost of her late brother. Netflix lists Will Forte, Eliza Coupe, and Skyler Gisondo among the voice and on-screen talent, with series creator Matt Roller.
Season 1 plays the premise straight for laughs—each episode sees the family juggling everyday crises, high-maintenance guests, and the brother’s spirited problem-solving from beyond the veil. The official series page includes the trailer and episode materials to get you oriented before check-in.
6. ‘Mafia: Most Wanted’ (2025)

A concise three-episode docuseries, ‘Mafia: Most Wanted’ traces the rise and global reach of the ’Ndrangheta from Calabria to Toronto, drawing on investigators, insiders, and archival material. Netflix’s page confirms the scope and episode count.
Backgrounders from major outlets add context on the group’s operations and why the docuseries is surfacing now, while Canadian and European sources note the production’s focus on cross-Atlantic networks. It’s a compact binge for organized-crime history buffs.
5. ‘Billionaires’ Bunker’ (2025)

From Álex Pina and Esther Martínez Lobato (the team behind ‘Money Heist’ and ‘Berlin’), this eight-episode thriller locks rival ultra-wealthy clans inside a luxury shelter during an apparent global catastrophe. Netflix lists Miren Ibarguren, Joaquín Furriel, and Natalia Verbeke among the stars.
Coverage around launch reveals that the “apocalypse” conceit is itself a twisty construct, with the series evolving from doomsday survival into a psychological chess match about power and privilege. For more on the premise and production, see Netflix’s announcement and interviews with Pina.
4. ‘Raw’ (1993– )

WWE’s flagship Monday-night show streams weekly on Netflix in the U.S., and the September 22, 2025 episode delivered multiple storyline beats involving top champions and a Rhodes–Rollins face-off. WWE’s official recap highlights matches and post-match angles from that night’s card.
Industry coverage also tracked Netflix viewership for the episode, noting a dip week-to-week amid heavy sports competition. If you’re catching up, WWE’s site provides quick-hit results and segments, and subsequent episodes (like September 29) advanced ongoing storylines.
3. ‘Doc’ (2025– )

‘Doc’ follows Dr. Amy Larsen, a chief of internal medicine who loses eight years of memory after a traumatic brain injury and must rebuild her life and career. Developed by Barbie Kligman from the Italian series ‘Doc – Nelle tue mani’, the U.S. version stars Molly Parker, with Omar Metwally, Jon Ecker, and Amirah Vann among the ensemble.
Season 1 episodes—directed in part by Rebecca Thomas—establish Amy’s relationships, hospital politics, and the mystery surrounding a patient death that preceded her accident. The series airs on Fox with streaming availability thereafter; Season 1 is on Netflix, and Season 2 premiered in September 2025 on broadcast.
2. ‘Wayward’ (2025)

Set in the Vermont town of Tall Pines, ‘Wayward’ centers on a small-town cop and a “school for troubled teens” with a dangerously charismatic founder. Mae Martin stars and created the limited series, with Toni Collette and Sarah Gadon in key roles.
All eight episodes are on Netflix now. Reporting around launch notes that, while billed as a limited series, its finale leaves threads that could support continuation—something Martin has acknowledged even as no renewal is announced yet.
1. ‘Black Rabbit’ (2025)

In ‘Black Rabbit’, a rising New York restaurateur is dragged into the city’s criminal underworld when his reckless brother returns owing dangerous debts. The limited series stars Jude Law and Jason Bateman, with Cleopatra Coleman among the cast; it was created by Zach Baylin and Kate Susman.
Across its episodes, the show threads organized-crime pressure with family loyalty and the hospitality world’s high-stakes deals, using the brothers’ escalating crisis to propel the plot. Netflix’s series hub includes trailers and episode details if you want a preview before diving in.
Share your picks—and what you’re watching next—in the comments!


