WELCOME TO THE new age of Yellowstone. A little more than a year and change after super producer Taylor Sheridan’s mega-hit neo-Western series came to a close, the story of the Duttons (and their adjacent world) picks up again with Marshals. The series, set a year after the Yellowstone finale, follows Kayce Dutton (Luke Grimes) in a new situation: joining a team of deputy U.S. Marshals.
Kayce may be the youngest son of the late John Dutton (played in most of Yellowstone by Kevin Costner before his unceremonious exit in the middle of the show’s final season), but he’s also the toughest. Throughout Yellowstone, we learned of Kayce’s past in the armed forces, and also saw him put those skills to use as an ass-kicker. In Marshals, now, we get to see him go full Clint Eastwood, leading a Western story as our primary Cowboy hat-wearing hero. The story is simple: he joins a team of deputized U.S. Marshals when his old SEAL team leader (Logan Marshall-Green) decides to bring him in.
The concept of Marshals is simple enough, and the show promises to keep it that way. We’re going to get more Dutton story—with Kayce leading the way and a number of other familiar faces along for the ride—but we’re also going to get some fun Western style action and Cowboying.
There are some differences between Marshals and Yellowstone, though. Most obviously, we’re seeing Kayce starting a new adventure. We know that his sister Beth (Kelly Reilly) and brother-in-law Rip (Cole Hauser) are somewhere else on their own new ranch (and we’ll see that on a new show later this year called Dutton Ranch). But we’re also seeing Kayce on this show without his wife, Monica (Kelsey Asbille). We don’t know why—maybe they break up, or maybe something worse happened in the year off-screen between shows—but it’s certain to be a vital factor in the Kayce we find in Marshals.
There’s also a major change behind the scenes. Sheridan remains involved with the project as a producer, but he’s not involved this time as a writer; The creator and showrunner of Marshals is Spencer Hudnut, who is best known as the showrunner of CBS’s SEAL Team.
But these changes are all minor to the real bit of headlining news: Yellowstone is back, and we know fans of the Dutton dynasty are going to be eager to tune in. Below, we’ve got all the information to make sure you don’t miss a single episode.

When is the next episode of Marshals coming out?
Each new episode of Marshals will release on Sundays at 8:00 EST and 8:00 PST on local CBS stations, and it will simultaneously premiere at that same time on Paramount+ for subscribers of that service’s premium tier. Episodes will be available on Mondays for all other Paramount+ subscribers.
The next episode of Marshals will debut on Sunday, March 8 on CBS and Paramount+ premium, and will be available the next day for other Paramount+ subscribers.
How many episodes of Marshals are left?
The first season of Marshals will be 13 episodes in total, the first of which has now aired. That means there’s still 12 more episodes—and twelve more weeks of Yellowstone sequel story—remaining in the first season of Marshals.
Here’s the complete release schedule for Marshals:
Episodes release on Sundays
Episode 1, “Piya Wiconi”: Airing on CBS and Paramount + Premium on March 1, and streaming on other Paramount + levels on March 2
Episode 2, “Zone of Death”: Airing on CBS and Paramount + Premium on March 8, and streaming on other Paramount + levels on March 9
Episode 3, “Road to Nowhere”: Airing on CBS and Paramount + Premium on March 15, and streaming on other Paramount + levels on March 16
Episode 4 : Airing on CBS and Paramount + Premium on March 22, and streaming on other Paramount + levels on March 23
Episode 5 : Airing on CBS and Paramount + Premium on March 29, and streaming on other Paramount + levels on March 30
Episode 6 : Airing on CBS and Paramount + Premium on April 5, and streaming on other Paramount + levels on April 6
Episode 7 : Airing on CBS and Paramount + Premium on April 12, and streaming on other Paramount + levels on April 13
Episode 8 : Airing on CBS and Paramount + Premium on April 19, and streaming on other Paramount + levels on April 20
Episode 9 : Airing on CBS and Paramount + Premium on April 26, and streaming on other Paramount + levels on April 27
Episode 10 : Airing on CBS and Paramount + Premium on May 3, and streaming on other Paramount + levels on May 4
Episode 11 : Airing on CBS and Paramount + Premium on May 10, and streaming on other Paramount + levels on May 11
Episode 12 : Airing on CBS and Paramount + Premium on May 17, and streaming on other Paramount + levels on May 18
Episode 13 : Airing on CBS and Paramount + Premium on May 24, and streaming on other Paramount + levels on May 25

Evan is the culture editor for Men’s Health, with bylines in The New York Times, MTV News, Brooklyn Magazine, and VICE. He loves weird movies, watches too much TV, and listens to music more often than he doesn’t.
