
Hollywood stars are gearing up for Sunday night’s Oscars, in an exciting year for the awards race where several categories are too close to call.
Political thriller One Battle After Another is the favourite to win best picture, but it faces tough competition from vampire horror Sinners, which has a record-breaking 16 nominations.
Irish star Jessie Buckley is considered the firm frontrunner to win best actress for her performance in Hamnet.
But the other acting races are tighter, with stars such as Michael B Jordan, Timothée Chalamet, Amy Madigan, Wunmi Mosaku and Sean Penn all in contention.
Here’s everything you need to know ahead of Sunday’s ceremony.
How to watch the Oscars 2026
The Academy Awards will be broadcast on ITV in the UK, with red carpet coverage starting at 22:15 GMT before the ceremony kicks off at 23:00 GMT.
The unusually early start is down to a combination of the ceremony being an hour earlier than it used to be, as well as the clocks having already changed in the US but not the UK.
For US viewers, the ceremony begins at 16:00 PT/19:00 ET, and can be watched on ABC and streamed on Hulu.
Who is presenting the Oscars?
Conan O’Brien is returning to hosting duties this year, after a barnstorming performance in 2025 where he performed comedic musical numbers and affectionately roasted the nominees in his opening monologue.
Several guest stars have also been enlisted to give out some of the statuettes throughout the night.
Actors who appear in some of this year’s major films but weren’t nominated individually have been invited to present awards, such as Paul Mescal (Hamnet), Chase Infiniti (One Battle After Another) and Gwyneth Paltrow (Marty Supreme).
Other category presenters will include Nicole Kidman, Priyanka Chopra Jonas, Robert Downey Jr, Anne Hathaway and Chris Evans, as well as last year’s quartet of acting winners – Adrien Brody, Mikey Madison, Kieran Culkin and Zoe Saldaña.