Fleabag's final episode aired on 8 April 2019, bringing the two-season story to a close. The wedding of the protagonist’s father and godmother takes place, with Fleabag returning the golden statue as a gift. Claire admits the truth about her miscarriage and ends her marriage to Martin, running after Klare instead.
Fleabag spends the day supporting her father before confessing her love to the priest at a bus stop. He admits he loves her too but chooses God. After a quiet goodbye, Fleabag waves to the audience for the last time and walks away alone.
The final episode centers on the wedding of the protagonist’s father and her godmother, and the ceremony does take place as arranged. The day begins with family members preparing for the event, with Fleabag still holding onto the golden statue that had been central throughout the series.
At the venue, guests gather and the atmosphere reflects the uneasy ties among those present. Fleabag helps her father navigate the emotions of the day, especially as he expresses doubt about the decisions he is making.
Claire attends as well, facing her own issues privately, but remains a part of the gathering. The wedding proceeds with the priest, who has been central to the second season, involved in the preparations. The protagonist interacts with each member of her family during the day, with conversations that close lingering threads from earlier episodes.
The event provides the backdrop for moments of honesty, particularly between the sisters, who share more direct words than they had for much of the series. As the wedding unfolds, the protagonist finds herself taking on the role of support rather than disruption, guiding her family through the ceremony and ensuring that it concludes without interruption, despite the emotional weight hanging over everyone involved.
Claire reaches a final decision

Claire ends her marriage to Martin during the wedding day itself, choosing a moment of finality after carrying the weight of indecision for so long. The truth of her miscarriage is spoken aloud, and with it, the lie that had bound her to Martin finally breaks.
Her career had already revealed another path, through her closeness with her Finnish colleague Klare, and that possibility rises again while the wedding takes place. Martin’s years of manipulation, his sharp remarks, and his constant dishonesty are no longer barriers she is willing to face.
The words push Martin out of her life and make room for something new. Earlier in the series, her private admission of feelings for Klare had gone nowhere, but now the choice is hers to pursue it. The end of this marriage draws shut one of the show’s most punishing chapters, marked by pressure, control, and the slow recognition of what she truly wants.
The Golden Statue changes meaning

The golden statue, long fought over between Fleabag and her godmother, remains present until the very end, and its meaning changes once its true origin is revealed.
Fleabag returns it during the wedding as a gift, believing the gesture to be one of peace after years of back-and-forth over ownership. However, the godmother reveals a significant detail about the statue that directly ties it to Fleabag’s late mother. This revelation alters the object from being just a prize in their family power struggle into something far more personal.
Throughout the series, Fleabag has stolen, returned, and re-stolen the statue multiple times, often using it as a way to challenge her godmother’s authority. But at the wedding, the disclosure forces her to see it differently, no longer as a weapon but as a connection to her past.
After this moment, the statue takes on new weight for Fleabag, who decides to hold onto it once more. The object, once a symbol of rebellion, becomes linked to memory and grief, closing one of the show’s longest-running storylines with a quiet change of significance.
Fleabag walks away on her own

The final scene confirms that Fleabag does not stay with the priest and instead leaves on her own. After the wedding, she meets him at a bus stop, where the two speak openly about their feelings. They both admit their love for one another, but he makes it clear that he has chosen his faith. This exchange closes the central storyline of the second season.
After their conversation, the priest leaves, and Fleabag is left at the bus stop holding the golden statue. She takes a moment with it, keeping it close to her, before turning to the audience for the last time. The fourth wall break, which has defined the series since its first episode, is used once more, but differently. Instead of a joke or commentary, she simply waves goodbye and walks away down the street.
The audience does not follow her, marking the end of her story. This moment closes the series entirely, as the protagonist moves forward without the need for further explanation or interaction. Her departure confirms that the show’s story ends here, with no additional continuation beyond this final walk away.
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