Man Utd All or Nothing series plans have now been confirmed by the club, with Manchester United announcing that Prime Video will follow the Reds for a documentary covering Michael Carrick’s first full season in charge.
For supporters, this is not just another media-office announcement. It means cameras around United through a season that already carries pressure: Carrick’s first full campaign, a Champions League return, a rebuilt midfield and the continuing question of how much access a club of this size should really allow.
United’s official confirmation says All or Nothing: United is coming to Amazon Prime Video in 2027. The timing matters, because filming will sit around the 2026/27 season, the campaign that starts with United’s 2026/27 fixture release and Carrick’s first summer shaping the team properly.
What Manchester United Have Confirmed
The club’s news page now leads with the Prime Video series, making this an official United development rather than another round of media speculation. The series title is direct enough: All or Nothing: Manchester United.
The Sun reports that Prime Video cameras will follow United through the 2026/27 season and says the deal is a record one for this kind of club access. It also quotes a United source saying the club had been “inundated” with offers for a behind-the-scenes documentary.
That last line is no surprise. United remain one of the few clubs capable of turning routine corridor footage into global appointment viewing. But the supporter question is sharper: what kind of United are Prime Video actually going to capture?
Why Carrick’s First Full Season Changes The Story
This is a very different proposition from a glossy end-of-era documentary. Carrick is still building authority, and the club are still trying to show that the football operation has moved into a more coherent phase.
That is why the series will carry weight beyond entertainment. ReadManUtd has already looked at Omar Berrada’s Michael Carrick assessment, and this now becomes another public test of that direction. If United look organised, serious and aligned, the series can strengthen the sense of reset. If not, the access will only make the scrutiny louder.
The football context is obvious. United have already entered the summer with major squad questions, including midfield changes, player departures and the need to support Carrick properly. The club’s visible 2026/27 squad planning will now unfold in a season where cameras are part of the backdrop.
The Access Question Will Split Supporters
There is a reason this has not happened before. In 2025, Sports Business Journal, citing The Athletic, reported that United had withdrawn from Amazon talks after concerns over the “potential intrusion on the first team”. That is still the obvious risk now.
Amazon’s football archive shows the appeal. The Prime Video page for All or Nothing: Manchester City promises an “exclusive look” inside the club, including dressing-room footage and the lives of players away from the pitch.
United fans will want that access, but they will also want standards protected. Nobody at Old Trafford should need reminding that this club can become a circus when the football is not strong enough. The cameras are only a problem if the team is not ready for them.
What United Fans Should Watch Next
The immediate details still matter: how much first-team access Prime Video gets, whether Carrick and senior players are central characters, and how the club handles transfer-window material once the cameras are rolling.
The bigger point is that United have chosen visibility. After years in which supporters have demanded clearer standards, more accountability and less drift, this is a bold move. It may be controlled television, but it still opens a window.
If Carrick’s United are moving in the right direction, the series could capture the start of something supporters can believe in. If the season wobbles, All or Nothing will become a far more uncomfortable title than anyone in the boardroom intended.




