Who’s in the cast of ‘The Royals’ now?
The 2025 Netflix series The Royals pairs a tech CEO with a reluctant prince in a breezy Indian rom-com that has already drawn strong streaming numbers and quick renewal talk. Viewers hunting for the cast list want a clear map of who plays whom, not recycled hype, especially with Season 2 development chatter now surfacing.
Leads set the tone
Bhumi Pednekar stars as Sophia Kanmani Shekhar, the sharp founder of startup Work Potato. She carries the practical, high-pressure side of the story across all eight Season 1 episodes.
Ishaan Khatter plays Aviraaj “Fizzy” Singh, the Maharaja of Morpur whose inherited title collides with Sophia’s business world. The pairing drives the central romance and sets the tone for the season’s lighter moments.
The two actors anchor the eight-episode arc, and early social chatter credits their chemistry for keeping the fish-out-of-water premise afloat.
Queen anchors the palace
Sakshi Tanwar appears as Maharani Padmaja “Paddy” Singh, the steady wife of the late king and mother to Fizzy and his siblings. Her presence grounds the family dynamics that run beneath the rom-com surface.
She appears in every episode, offering quiet authority while the younger characters chase deals and dates. Tanwar’s film background, including Dangal, gives the role instant recognition for Indian audiences.
Her steady performance has drawn praise in online threads for balancing comedy with the show’s occasional notes of grief.
Royal siblings add friction
Vihaan Samat steps in as Digvijay “Diggy” Singh, Fizzy’s younger brother who mixes mischief with loyalty. He appears throughout the season, often pushing the prince toward or away from Sophia.
Kavya Trehan plays Divyaranjini “Jinnie” Singh, the sister whose modern outlook clashes with palace tradition. Her arc touches on career ambitions that mirror Sophia’s own.
Together the siblings keep family scenes lively and give the central couple external pressure without derailing the main plot.
Legend adds weight
Zeenat Aman returns to screens as Maji, also called Bhabisa, the elder relative who watches over the household with dry wit. Her casting surprised viewers who remember her from earlier decades of Indian cinema.
She appears across multiple episodes, offering comic asides that cut through the younger characters’ drama. The choice signals the show’s intent to blend nostalgia with current streaming appeal.
Industry observers noted the move on social platforms, calling it a smart bridge between generations of Indian film fans now watching on Netflix.
Comic relief and side stories
Nora Fatehi joins as a recurring presence whose energetic scenes lighten heavier family moments. Her role stays peripheral yet memorable in the eight-episode run.
Lisa Mishra plays Niki Kaushik, a friend and colleague who keeps Sophia tethered to the startup world. The character supplies workplace banter that offsets palace formality.
Chunky Panday and Dino Morea fill smaller parts that add quick jokes and occasional romantic misdirection. Their appearances keep pacing brisk without crowding the leads.
Veterans round out the court
Milind Soman and Sumukhi Suresh appear in supporting capacities that touch on business and etiquette. Their scenes help explain the rules the prince and CEO keep breaking.
Udit Arora, Luke Kenny, Jagdish Rajpurohit, and Mohit Verma round out the ensemble with brief but pointed roles. Each actor brings recognizable faces from prior Indian productions.
The mix of established names and newer talent reflects the show’s aim to satisfy both diaspora viewers and global Netflix users discovering Indian rom-coms.
Renewal shifts the outlook
Netflix renewed The Royals for Season 2 in May 2025 after strong initial numbers. Reports mention possible director changes and cast adjustments ahead.
Viewers online are already speculating which supporting players might expand or exit. The uncertainty keeps attention on the current ensemble while the next season is mapped.
Production remains with Pritish Nandy Communications, and the eight-episode structure is expected to hold for the follow-up.
Older series stays separate
An earlier E! drama also called The Royals ran from 2015 to 2018 with Elizabeth Hurley, William Moseley, and Alexandra Park. That series followed a fictional British family and ended after four seasons.
Search overlap brings occasional confusion, yet the two shows share no cast, premise, or network. Current queries center on the 2025 Netflix title.
Clear labeling on streaming pages and press materials has reduced mix-ups, though brief reminders still surface in comment threads.
Next chapter takes shape
The Royals continues to ride rom-com momentum on Netflix while its cast balances fresh faces with veteran presence. Season 2 planning will test how many of these characters stay central once creative shifts settle.

