Alec Baldwin, Geena Davis, Winona Ryder, Michael Keaton
He’s baaaack… whether you asked for him or not.
Beetlejuice 3: The Haunted Heirloom (2026) resurrects the wild, gothic, and wickedly funny spirit of the original films, dragging audiences back into the delicious weirdness of Winter River — where the dead never stay quiet, and the living never stay sane for long.
An attic, an heirloom… and one very big mistake
Years after the mayhem of the first two hauntings, the Deetz house still creaks with secrets. Lydia (Winona Ryder), now an adult raising a teenage son with a taste for the strange and supernatural, returns to her childhood home hoping to reconnect with her past — and maybe escape the noise of the living world for a while.

But during a dusty attic exploration, her son discovers a peculiar relic: a twisted, hand-carved heirloom wrapped in cobwebs and spell markings. One curious touch, one spark of ancient magic, and suddenly—
Beetlejuice is back.
No chanting required. No rules upheld. Just chaos waiting in the wings.
The ghost couple returns — still confused, still lovable
Adam and Barbara Maitland (Alec Baldwin and Geena Davis) have spent decades trying to perfect the art of haunting. They haven’t succeeded. But their earnestness, awkwardness, and undead charm remain intact, making them the only ghosts Lydia trusts. When Beetlejuice crashes back into their world, the trio realizes the heirloom holds a dark history tied directly to the Maitlands… and to the barrier between realms.

Beetlejuice has a new obsession — and it’s dangerous
Michael Keaton slips back into the striped suit with manic brilliance. This time, Beetlejuice isn’t satisfied with harmless pranks or chaotic jokes. The heirloom contains forbidden magic — the power to rip open the veil and permanently fuse the worlds of the living and the dead into one swirling carnival of madness.
To Beetlejuice, it’s paradise.
To everyone else? It’s apocalypse with jazz hands.
As reality warps, furniture comes alive, skeletons file complaints, and entire neighborhoods begin to fold in on themselves like paper dollhouses.
Lydia vs. Beetlejuice: Round Three
With supernatural pandemonium spreading across town, Lydia must put aside her skepticism and step into the fight. But defeating Beetlejuice requires her to confront something deeper — her long-buried fear that she, like him, doesn’t truly belong in the world of the living.

Her son, unexpectedly inheriting Lydia’s ability to sense spirits, becomes the key to stopping the relic’s magic before it consumes everything. But trusting Beetlejuice, even for one minute, proves to be the hardest task of all.
A gothic carnival of heart and horror
With Tim Burton’s signature style painted across every frame — crooked rooftops, swirling shadows, stop-motion chaos, and oddball characters who look like they crawled out of a funhouse mirror — The Haunted Heirloom embraces the franchise’s absurdity and heart in equal measure.
The result?
A hilarious, spooky, wonderfully twisted adventure that proves once again:
In this house, the dead have more personality — and more problems — than the living ever could.