Steal is a British crime thriller television series created by Sotiris Nikias for Amazon Prime Video, starring Sophie Turner, Archie Madekwe and Jacob Fortune-Lloyd. It centres on the fallout of a robbery at a financial management company. It premiered on 21 January 2026.
Zara Dunne, an office worker for pension management company Lochmill Capital, is caught up in a major robbery by an armed gang. However, it soon emerges she may have had a key role in the crime.
The series was developed by Drama Republic and created by Nikias, who had previously written thrillers under the pen name Ray Celestin. Sam Miller produced, and directed three episodes. The cast is led by Sophie Turner, Archie Madekwe and Jacob Fortune-Lloyd, and also includes Yusra Warsama, Andrew Howard, Jonathan Slinger and Andrew Koji.
Filming began in London in May 2024.
All six episodes were made available on 21 January 2026 on Prime Video.
The series holds a 79% approval rating on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, based on 33 critic reviews. The website's critics consensus reads, "Gripping with few narrative gripes, Steal invests in thrilling heist entertainment with stirring performances by Sophie Turner and Archie Madekwe to rousing effect." Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned a score of 64 out of 100 based on 12 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews. Lucy Mangan of The Guardian awarded the series four stars out of five, praising the cast and writing. Anita Singh in The Telegraph also gave it four out five stars. Aramide Tinubu of Variety dubbed the series "an intense watch" and "'Steal' works well because of Turner's fantastic performance. At the core of the series is an unimaginable conspiracy that upends the whole British financial ecosystem. However, the unsettling nail-biter is really about the discontent bubbling just below the surface of society and the extreme things human beings are willing to do to give themselves a chance at the lives they think they deserve."
Angie Han of The Hollywood Reporter was more critical, praising the opening episode as "a pretty slick little thriller" but that "the next five episodes struggle to keep up the momentum. Doing somehow both too much and too little, Steal keeps asking questions past the point where I'd stopped caring about the answers."