Spider-Man: Brand New Day — the post-No Way Home MCU reset for Tom Holland's Peter Parker — is now ten weeks from its July 31 release. Marvel Studios has dropped the final trailer alongside an exclusive Empire Magazine cover reveal, locking in the marketing window for the highest-stakes Spider-Man film since 2002.
Spider-Man: Brand New Day — the fourth Tom Holland solo Spider-Man film and the direct sequel to No Way Home (2021) — is now ten weeks from its July 31, 2026 theatrical release. Marvel Studios and Sony Pictures dropped the final trailer this morning, paired with an Empire Magazine exclusive cover reveal featuring Holland in a redesigned suit and Charlie Cox's Daredevil sharing equal billing.
The post-No Way Home reset. Brand New Day picks up after the universal forgetting spell that ended No Way Home — Peter Parker is now invisible to MJ, Ned, and everyone he ever knew. The film reframes him as a street-level, ground-up hero working as a coffee-shop barista by day and a Brooklyn vigilante by night. Director Destin Daniel Cretton has described the film in Empire as 'the Raimi Spider-Man 2 of the Holland trilogy' — meaning a focused, grounded character study rather than a multiversal spectacle.
Charlie Cox's Daredevil takes the deuteragonist role. Cox's Matt Murdock — established as MCU-canon in No Way Home's brick-catching cameo — is officially Brand New Day's co-lead. The Empire cover features Holland and Cox side by side, with Cox in his redesigned Daredevil: Born Again costume. Their dynamic is reportedly the film's central relationship — a teacher-student mentor pairing replacing the lost Aunt May / MJ / Ned support system.
The trailer's record-breaking views. The first Brand New Day trailer (April 2026) crossed 718 million YouTube views in its first 24 hours — making it the most-watched movie trailer of all time, breaking Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness's previous record. The final trailer, dropping today, is expected to perform similarly. Industry analysts are projecting Brand New Day opens between $145M and $180M domestic — putting it within striking distance of No Way Home's $260M opening, but unlikely to surpass it without the multiversal cast hook.
For complete context, see our earlier trailer coverage, our Daredevil casting confirmation, our London reshoots update, and our every Spider-Man movie in order guide.