TV Younger season 7 will 'unofficially' be its last The TV Land comedy that stars Sutton Foster and Hilary Duff will most likely wrap with its seventh season. By Ruth Kinane Ruth Kinane Ruth is a correspondent who covers TV shows such as Younger, Jersey Shore and The Affair. She will write you a drinking game for any show you want and will remain loyal to Britney Spears no matter how many fashion shows she posts on Instagram. EW's editorial guidelines Published on September 14, 2020 05:16PM EDT Photo: TV Land Younger isn't likely to get much older. On Monday, it was reported that the upcoming season of the TV Land comedy will probably be the last. “We are unofficially planning [season 7] as a final season,” creator Darren Star told TVLine of his Sutton Foster-starring series that follows a 40-something book editor masquerading as a 20-something in order to survive in the competitive world of publishing. Season 6 of Younger wrapped back in September 2019, with the seventh season due to start shooting in New York City in early 2020, before the COVID-19 pandemic suspended all production. Cameras will now start rolling for new episodes in the coming few weeks, with Star weighing up how and whether to weave the pandemic into the plot. "The action of Younger sort of picks up where the last season left off, which was before the pandemic," said Star, adding that a lot of episodes were written before the shutdown. "But I do think we’re looking forward to incorporating it into the action as the season progresses.” Based on the 2005 novel of the same name by Pamela Redmond Satran, Younger premiered on TV Land in March 2015 and, in addition to Foster, stars Hilary Duff, Nico Tortorella, Peter Hermann, Miriam Shor, Debi Mazar, Molly Bernard, and Charles Michael Davis. Star's latest series Emily in Paris will premiere on Netflix Oct. 2. Related content: Sutton Foster and Miriam Shor take us inside that explosive Younger episode Liza and Pauline have an awkward encounter in Younger exclusive clip Another novel from Younger is coming to real-life bookshelves