The lore of Little House on the Prairie has been an American cultural staple for almost a century. First publishing her work in the 1930s, Laura Ingalls Wilder recounted her upbringing as a young pioneer in 1860s and 1870s America. In the 2026 Netflix adaptation of Ingalls Wilder’s books, Laura is played by Alice Halsey, who sparkles as our curious, friendly heroine.
Little House on the Prairie opens as Laura’s family makes their way, via covered wagon, from Minnesota to the outskirts of Independence, Kansas, a burgeoning new town that has yet to establish a church or a post office. There’s also no school on-site yet, as Laura and her pragmatic older sister Mary (Skywalker Hughes) are thrilled to learn. For Laura and Mary, their new life on the prairie is about adventure and the joy of girlhood, like making flower crowns and singing cheery songs.
The move is patriarch Charles’ (Luke Bracey) idea, despite his wife, Caroline’s (Crosby Fitzgerald), reluctance. The series posits the parents and children as pairs of kindred spirits: Charles and Laura are hopeful and idealistic, seeing the prairie as a place of possibility and friendship.
Little House on the Prairie (2026) reintroduces audiences to the Ingalls family.

Caroline and Mary are practical and concerned about the grit required to start over in a place that barely exists on a map. But Charles’ optimism and Caroline’s resilience are an excellent pairing, shining through Bracey and Fitzgerald’s warm, vivid chemistry.
You’d be forgiven for remembering 1974-1982’s Little House on the Prairie as a twee family show about pioneers. But that series never shied away from sensitive topics, such as addiction and child abuse. This new adaptation carries on that legacy in a different way, most notably by addressing the forceful removal of the Osage from their land.
Charles and other settlers build their houses on Osage land as the American government increases efforts to displace Indigenous tribes of the Great Plains. Charles comes to know William Mitchell (Meegwun Fairbrother), an Osage farmer whose family lives near the Ingalls’s.
The Netflix adaptation delivers a fresh, updated take on a classic.

Little House on the Prairie draws a parallel between Charles’ and Mitchell’s families. They’re husbands and fathers trying to raise families in times of change, doing the best they can. Laura finds a kindred spirit in Mitchell’s daughter, Good Eagle (Wren Zhawenim Gotts), and they are eager to share their toys and games.
Mitchell’s wife, White Sun (Alyssa Wapanatâhk), and Caroline view one another’s families as encroaching on their space and peace. Mitchell is a key communicator between the Osage and the settlers, wanting to do right by his own community while still building a cordial relationship with the Ingalls family.
Offscreen, the creative team consulted experts on Osage culture and history, including language expert Talee Redcorn and cultural consultant Julie O’Keefe. There’s deliberate care to depict the wide range of perspectives and experiences in this era, and it shows.
Charles, ‘Pa’ Ingalls, steals the show, and Luke Bracey lives up to Michael Landon’s performance.

The standout in Little House on the Prairie is Luke Bracey as Charles, known affectionately as “Pa” to his daughters. Pa Ingalls is perhaps the most beloved figure of Little House on the Prairie‘s legacy, thanks in part to Michael Landon’s memorable performance in the original adaptation.
Here, Pa is just as striking a figure. Bracey’s Charles is a romantic optimist whose dream of starting over on the prairie soars at best and endangers his family at worst, including an early incident where their wagon nearly capsizes while crossing a river. He’s a good man, but the series doesn’t put him on a pedestal. He and Halsey’s Laura make a winning duo, believably playing father and daughter.
There’s a robust ensemble in Little House on the Prairie, but by introducing too many characters, the denizens of Independence are underutilized. Jocko Sims and Barrett Doss have lovely chemistry as the town doctor and a general store owner, respectively. Mary’s only major arc pertains to her crush on Caleb (Kowen Cadorath), an orphan taken in by Doss’s Emily. Mary Holland and Michael Hough costar as the Jameses, a well-to-do couple who rule Independence’s social norms and event calendar. While well-acted, none of these characters gets enough time to shine.
Despite a strong ensemble cast there’s not enough time spent on supporting characters.

Charles and Caroline are both haunted by the lives they left behind in Minnesota, with each having fractured relationships with their families of origin. Charles’ inner life gets far more screen time and development than Caroline’s.
Charles and Laura receive significant screen time, but at the expense of Caroline and Mary, who often feel like supporting parts in a grander story about Charles and Laura. Warren Christie‘s mysterious, troubled Mr. Edwards leaves the strongest impression out of the supporting players as he grows close to the Ingalls family, serving as an uncle-like figure to the children.
Little House on the Prairie often falls victim to desaturated color scenes, robbing the town of Independence the vibrancy it so desperately needs. Charles’ enthusiasm for starting a new life near an up-and-coming town ought to be matched with lush colors. Instead, Independence is washed out in filtered grays and browns.
Netflix once again settles for the least interesting lighting and desaturated colors.

It’s not an exclusively Little House on the Prairie-centric issue; Wicked and Women Talking are just two recent examples of this unfortunate trend. But the muted colors distract from the narrative that the Ingalls’ new life is full of promise. Charles is often excited about the world they’ve arrived in, but when has an exciting world ever looked so gray?
The series looks too sleek for a story about starting over with little. Every character has perfectly styled hair and clothes that look brand-new, with little sign of wear. A polished look works for Netflix’s own Bridgerton, which has never claimed to be the most aesthetically accurate series.
But for Little House on the Prairie, which is so determined to capture the experience of roughing it, that sleekness is out of place. The Ingalls’ log cabin, beautifully imagined by production designer Jonah Markowitz, is the most invitingly lifelike. But there’s a dollhouse quality to the remaining sets, as though the characters have merely wandered into neat, tidy rooms no one has walked through before.
Despite a level of artifice, Little House on the Prairie is a confident new take.

A sense of heart has always been key to the Ingalls family stories, and Little House on the Prairie has it in spades. The closeness of the family comes through in the writing, led by The Housemaid scribe Rebecca Sonnenshine as showrunner. Mary and Laura’s sisterly love, and occasional bickering, are a celebration of girlhood, masterfully handled by the series’ women-led roster of directors, including Lessons in Chemistry‘s Sarah Adina Smith.
Little House on the Prairie won’t replace the original adaptation in terms of impact on pop culture. But that’s a massive responsibility to place on any adaptation of beloved material, and it’s worth re-contextualizing the history in the books, which have been criticized for their depiction of Indigenous tribes. Adding broader cultural context, such as the forced displacement of the Osage by the American government, benefits the source material.
It’s a Little House on the Prairie for 2026, confronting the reality of history while still retaining the familial heart of the story. Renewed for a second season months ahead of its premiere, there’s a lot of promise in Little House on the Prairie, a delightful, heartfelt adaptation for a new generation.
Little House on the Prairie (2026) premieres July 9 on Netflix.
Little House on the Prairie
7.5/10
TL;DR
It’s a Little House on the Prairie for 2026, confronting the reality of history while still retaining the familial heart of the story.

