Lorelai and Rory Gilmore have survived bad boyfriends and a great deal of coffee. Now they've survived a streaming migration.

A new address for Stars Hollow

All seven seasons of "Gilmore Girls" — Amy Sherman-Palladino's fast-talking dramedy, which ran on The WB and then The CW from 2000 to 2007 — left Netflix on June 30, ending a licensing run that dated to 2014. As of July 1 the series streams on Amazon Prime Video, Deadline reported. Netflix marked the exit with a wink, calling the show "a lifestyle" it was "sorry" to see go.

Where else to find it

Fans who don't subscribe to Prime Video have options. The series also remains available on Hulu and on Disney+, where it has streamed since December 2024, Forbes reported. The move gives Amazon a well-loved catalog title at a moment when streamers are paying up to license comfort-viewing staples.

The revival stays put — for now

One piece isn't moving. "Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life," the 2016 Netflix revival that delivered Sherman-Palladino's long-promised "final four words," was commissioned by Netflix directly under a ten-year exclusive window. That window runs until late November 2026, so the four-part miniseries stays on Netflix for now and is not part of the Prime Video deal covering the original run. Where it lands afterward has not been announced.

Musical chairs

The shuffle is a small example of the licensing churn reshaping streaming, as older network catalogs move among services when deals lapse. For viewers, the upshot is simpler than the corporate math: the original seven seasons of "Gilmore Girls" are now a Prime Video binge, just in time for summer.