Chicago P.D. Season 13, Episode 7, titled Impulse Control, dropped on November 12, 2025. It is the fall finale of the season. NBC aired it first, then it landed on Peacock, fuboTV, and more.
Anyway, this season is still glued to Hank Voight and the Intelligence Unit, doing their rough-and-tumble crime-solving thing around Chicago. The squad has been through the disbandment last season, now trying to piece it all back together. There is drama, brooding, and a classic Voight stare.
This time, we also have Officer Eva Imani, who has her own vibe, shakes things up a bit, and makes you wonder what the writers are cooking.
Chicago P.D. is a cocktail of shootouts, tense interrogations, and heavy personal baggage. Voight can’t catch a break, with old ghosts and someone still trying to blackmail him. The team is running itself ragged protecting people who honestly don’t stand a chance in this city.
Chicago P.D. Season 13, Episode 7 Impulse Control recap

Chicago P.D. has dropped its fall finale, Season 13, Episode 7, Impulse Control. The Intelligence Unit is neck-deep in a seriously twisted family mess that will probably haunt you at least until we get new episodes.
So, things start with Voight getting yet another creepy envelope from the shadowy blackmailer who has been messing with him all season. This time, there is a photo of his dad, plus a not-so-subtle nudge about Voight’s resignation. It also has a dark little hint about some ugly family secrets, maybe even abuse. Voight looks rattled, but obviously, he isn’t about to crumble that easily.
Instead, he zeroes in on Raymond Bell. Now, Bell has got some serious bad luck in the family department. His son went on a violent spree a while back, then died by suicide, and now Bell is left raising his granddaughter, Julie. Voight’s gut tells him Bell is not exactly the poster child for safe guardianship, and he thinks that the kid is in danger.
Meanwhile, a neighbor reports a break-in, and Voight and Detective Eva Imani pull up. And they find a young man, Michael Murray, who was all bloodied and begging for help. But next thing you know, Michael is dead, his hands mangled. Plus, all this looks like Bell’s late son’s signature violent acts.
Anyway, on paper, it looks like Michael is mixed up with some sketchy pimp and maybe drugs, but Voight has a hunch Bell is somehow connected to all this.
Diving deeper, the team stumbles across Aaron. He used to be the Bells’ gardener, and his story is straight-up nightmare fuel. Bell chopped off two of his fingers for stealing something small, and Aaron claims there is a basement wine cellar where people walk in but don’t come back out. He even drops a name, Aurelia, a nurse who just disappeared one day.
However, Aaron has previously been in and out of psych wards, so the credibility of this info is not very reliable. But his details are too gnarly to ignore. All hints point towards Bell being way more dangerous than they assume.
Voight and Imani are both way too tangled up in this case for it to be business as usual. Voigh can’t let it go because it hits too close to home. He has got all the old baggage from his own messed-up childhood, and then the blackmailer comes after him. Turns out, it all circles back to Devlin, an adversary from his past.
As for Imani, she has skin in the game. Missing people is personal for her, and she has protective instincts toward Julie, Bell’s granddaughter. The problem is, their passion keeps butting heads with the rules, especially when Child Services swoops in and says that they can’t question Julie. As of Julie, she has been talking about seeing “ghosts” in the basement, which is probably Aurelia.

So in Chicago P.D., we see the team is scrambling and connecting Bell to a bunch of victims all along this highway. They finally get enough dirt to put a tracker on his car, but it is not quite enough to actually book the guy right then. Then things get dicey with Julie’s life hanging by a thread. Imani just heads straight for Bell’s place, breaks in, and starts searching for Julie. She finds the girl’s phone, and then she hears someone moving around.
The Chicago P.D. episode just cuts off right there. Is it a trap? Who knows.
This Chicago P.D. episode has a slow-burning tension that pulls you in. Voight is out here working his mind games, and the squad is piecing together clues inch by inch. Meanwhile, Bell’s whole family situation is a powder keg just waiting for a spark.
Now, with Chicago P.D. dipping out for its midseason break, they have left us dangling. Will Bell be brought to justice? And what is the real deal with Voight’s blackmailer? And is Julie safe? Viewers will have to wait till January 7, 2026, for all the answers.