The Grand Tour is reportedly set to return in a brand new reboot but without Jeremy Clarkson, Richard Hammond and James May.

The Clarkson’s Farm star and his co-stars filmed the final special of the Prime Video series after it was revealed in November that the show was coming to an end.

However, according to reports, Studio Lambert, the production company behind The Traitors and Squid Game: The Challenge, has since landed the contract to "develop a fresh version" of the motoring show.

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Amazon has not formally announced the new commission and there has been no official statement but Industry magazine Broadcast reports that the series will have an "updated format". 

The veteran TV star, 63, has appeared in five seasons of the Prime Video show, travelling the world with Mr May and Mr Hammond test driving different vehicles on adventurous road trips.

The Grand Tour premiered back in November 2016 having been conceived in the wake of the trio’s departure from Top Gear on the BBC.

The final special, titled The Sand Job, saw the trio explore Zimbabwe and aired in February marking the end of almost 10 years – which Mr Clarkson said felt right.

Oxford Mail: Jeremy Clarkson Jeremy Clarkson (Image: Paul Nicholls)

“I’ve driven cars higher than anyone else and further north than anyone else,” he told The Times.

“We’ve done everything you can do with a car. When we had meetings about what to do next, people just threw their arms in the air.

“(The show) is immensely physical and when you’re unfit and fat and old, which I am … Camping in Mauritania was a stretch.”

Mr Clarkson also said he does not think the move to electric cars across the globe makes for “very interesting television”.

“An electric car is no different from a chest freezer or a microwave oven. There’s no glamour or excitement. This week on Top Chest Freezer. I think it suits the written media more,” he said.

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The end of The Grand Tour followed the news that the BBC had decided to rest hit motoring show Top Gear for the “foreseeable future” after host Andrew ‘Freddie’ Flintoff was seriously injured in a crash during filming in 2022.

Meanwhile, Mr Clarkson will return to TV screens when his adventures on his Diddly Squat Farm will return to Prime Video for the third series of the hit show next month. Filming for the fourth season is underway.

Clarkson's Farm, which sees the presenter's attempts to run the farm near Chadlington, was an instant hit when it first aired in 2021.

The second series, which started streaming in February, was Prime ­Video’s most-watched original show in the UK.