"Euphoria" fans will have to wait more than a year for the third season of the hit series.

HBO chief executive Casey Bloys revealed at a press event Thursday morning that "Euphoria" Season 3 is scheduled for 2025, Variety reported.

Other projects slated for 2025 include "The Last of Us" Season 2, "The White Lotus" Season 3 and the "It" prequel series "Welcome to Derry," according to a sizzle reel shown during the event.

Details about the plot of the upcoming "Euphoria" installment are scarce, but series creator and writer Sam Levinson did share a teaser back in August that hinted at what fans can expect from Season 3.

In an Elle cover story on "Euphoria" star Zendaya, Levinson told the magazine that he sees the series' third season as a "film noir."

He teased that, through the eyes of Zendaya's Rue, he will "explore what it means to be an individual with principles in a corrupt world."

HBO announced that it renewed "Euphoria" for a third season early last year, three weeks before Season 2 concluded on Feb. 27, 2022.

Production on Season 3 was set to start in the fall this year but was delayed by scheduling conflicts and the actors and writers strikes.

In addition to Zendaya, the drama series, which centers on troubled high schoolers caught up in a world of drugs, love and crime, also stars Hunter Schafer, Sydney Sweeney, Maude Apatow, Alexa Demie, Jacob Elordi, Angus Cloud, Barbie Ferreira, Dominic Fike, Eric Dane, Storm Reid, Colman Domingo, Javon Walton, Austin Abrams and Nika King.

Ferreira, who plays Kat Hernandez, announced her departure from the series in August last year.

"After four years of getting to embody the most special and enigmatic character Kat, I'm having to say a very teary-eyed goodbye," she wrote on Instagram.

Cloud, who played charismatic drug dealer Fezco "Fez" O'Neill, died at age 25 in July.

"Euphoria" Season 2 averaged 16.3 million viewers, making the series HBO's second-most watched show behind "Game of Thrones," which averaged 46 million viewers across its eighth and final season in 2019, Variety previously reported.

"Euphoria" also became the most-tweeted show of the decade, with 34 million tweets.