Suits star Gabriel Macht has addressed a potential return in the show's previously announced spinoff set in Los Angeles.

Following the original show's streaming success, which saw the legal drama broke its own streaming record on Netflix, creator Aaron Korsh is creating a spinoff featuring new characters in a new location.

As for Macht, who played 'closer' attorney Harvey Specter in the show aired between 2011 and 2019, the actor has left the door open on a comeback in the new series (via Screen Rant).

patrick j adams and gabriel macht in suits
NBC Universal

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"I mean I think it's in a world where some characters could in fact come [back]," he told The Hollywood Reporter in the wake of his reunion with co-star Patrick J Adams for a T-Mobile Super Bowl commercial last night (February 11).

Suits: LA is set in the same universe as the original series, which mainly took place in the offices of a fictional New York law firm and famously starred Meghan Markle in her final acting role before her marriage to Prince Harry.

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The Californian-set show won't be the first spinoff Suits has spawned, with a short-lived spinoff titled Pearson that followed Gina Torres' character Jessica Pearson navigating the world of Chicago politics.

Gina Torres in Suits s06e01, 'To Trouble'
USA Network

Related: Here's how Meghan Markle was written out of Suits

Despite the success enjoyed by Suits ever since it was added to Netflix last summer, there seems to be no current plans for a reboot, as confirmed by Korsh.

"Let me say right off that there is no #Suits reboot or anything in the works," he said on Twitter/X in August last year.

"Strike would have to end, some network or streamer would have to reach out and then we would have to collectively want to. Which is no small thing…"

Suits is available to stream on Netflix.

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Headshot of Stefania Sarrubba

Reporter, Digital Spy

Stefania is a freelance writer specialising in TV and movies. After graduating from City University, London, she covered LGBTQ+ news and pursued a career in entertainment journalism, with her work appearing in outlets including Little White Lies, The Skinny, Radio Times and Digital Spy

Her beats are horror films and period dramas, especially if fronted by queer women. She can argue why Scream is the best slasher in four languages (and a half).