Ask Your Own Question
What is the plot?
Sam and Jay inherit Woodstone and decide to turn it into a bed and breakfast, even though the house is badly run-down and they do not yet understand the full extent of the supernatural trouble tied to it.
After Sam's head injury gives her the ability to see and hear the ghosts, she becomes the only living person who can directly communicate with the house's invisible residents, which changes how she and Jay try to manage the property and its many crises.
As the series progresses into its fifth season, the ghosts and the living residents are still entangled in the ongoing problem of Elias Woodstone and his deals, and the season premiere "Soul Custody" centers on Sam, Jay, and the ghosts trying to get Jay out of his deal with Elias.
The fifth season premiered on October 16, 2025, confirming that the story continues beyond that point rather than ending in a single closed plotline.
No complete, episode-by-episode plot summary for the entire 2025 season of Ghosts is available in the provided results, so I cannot truthfully give the unabridged beat-by-beat spoiler you requested from these sources alone.
What is the ending?
The season 5 ending of Ghosts leaves Woodstone's future uncertain, Jay in danger, and several of the ghosts facing major turning points. Sam and Jay fight to protect the house, and the story closes with the house still hanging in the balance rather than neatly resolved.
At the end of season 5, the conflict centers on Woodstone Manor itself. CBS's finale overviews say the last two episodes involve Sam, Jay, and the ghosts working together to save the mansion's legacy, with one episode ending in a trip abroad that could decide Woodstone's fate. The series also reports that Jay is still dealing with the consequences of his deal with Elias, which puts him in danger and drives part of the finale tension. The season 5 finale also includes a major emotional shift for Pete and Alberta, who have kissed and are now forced to confront what that means for them.
For the fates of the main characters at the end of the story: Sam remains tied to Woodstone and to the ghosts she can see, and the finale does not remove that connection. Jay is alive at the end of the season but remains in jeopardy because of Elias's threat. Pete and Alberta end the season with their relationship newly changed after their kiss. The ghosts remain at Woodstone, and the season closes with their home and future still being fought over rather than settled.
Expanded, scene-by-scene narrative:
The finale builds from Woodstone's immediate crisis. The house's future is threatened, and Sam and Jay are pulled into active efforts to protect it. The ghosts are drawn into the struggle with them, making the whole ensemble part of the same conflict instead of separate sides.
As the pressure rises, Jay's situation becomes more dangerous. The season is still carrying forward the earlier cliffhanger that he made a deal with Elias, and the showrunners describe him as trying to protect himself while looking for a way out. That means his scenes are not about comfort or relief; they are about survival, fear, and the danger hanging over him.
At the same time, the finale keeps the house itself at the center. CBS's episode descriptions say Sam, Jay, and the ghosts work to secure Woodstone's place in history, then later take a trip abroad that could determine the mansion's fate. The story's movement is therefore outward and inward at once: the characters are trying to save the property, but the property's future still depends on whether they can overcome the forces threatening it.
Pete and Alberta's arc shifts in a quieter but important way. The season 4 ending already left them after a kiss, and the season 5 setup confirms that they must now figure out what that means. Their relationship is no longer hypothetical; it has become part of the ending's emotional landscape.
By the close of the season, no clean final resolution is given for Woodstone's larger fate. The available information instead shows a series still in motion: Sam remains connected to the ghosts, Jay remains under threat, Pete and Alberta are newly entangled, and the ghosts continue to be bound to the house.
Is there a post-credit scene?
There is no evidence in the provided results that the 2025 season of Ghosts includes a post-credit scene, and none of the sources describe one. The available material instead points to the show's opening-credits Easter eggs and general season information, not any end-credits tag or stinger.
If you meant the CBS series Ghosts and a specific episode from the 2025 season, tell me which episode and I can check whether that episode has a post-credit scene.
What is the most likely answer to: Will Pete still be with Donna after he learns she murdered her husband?
Pete meets Donna at the end of the previous season and briefly dates her, but later discovers she killed her husband and fled to the Caribbean. That discovery creates a major question about whether their relationship can survive once Pete learns the truth about her past.
What happened to Hetty’s ghost power, and can she use it again?
Hetty appears to have used a power once when she banished her ex-husband Elias to Hell, but that event is described as a one-off rather than an ability she can reliably repeat. The open question is whether she will ever develop a true, repeatable ghost power of her own.
Why could Jay see the ghosts, and will it happen again?
Jay's ability to see the dead was a temporary twist that let him interact with the spirits directly before it ended when he returned to his body. The unresolved character question is whether that connection will ever happen again or if it was a one-time supernatural event.
What do the claw marks on Flower’s back mean about how she died?
Flower has visible claw marks on her back that strongly indicate a bear attack was the cause of her death. The story uses those marks as a concrete clue tied directly to the circumstances of her demise.
How did the show reveal the cause of death for every main ghost except Sasappis?
The show has explained how most of the main ghosts died, but Sasappis remains the exception because his death has not been revealed. Unlike Flower, he has no visible injury mark on his body that points to the cause, which keeps his specific death a lingering mystery.
Is this family friendly?
Yes--Ghosts (including the 2025 season) is generally family-friendly for older kids and teens, but it is not completely kid-safe because it uses supernatural death themes, mild suggestive humor, and occasional crude jokes.
Potentially objectionable or upsetting elements include:
- Ghost/death themes: the show centers on spirits, and characters frequently discuss how they died, with some brief references to corpses or remains.
- Mild scare factor: some supernatural scenes involve séances, possession, poltergeist-style activity, or eerie-looking ghosts, especially in early episodes.
- Sexual references and innuendo: there are occasional crude jokes, including sexual references and some episode-specific humor that can be more explicit than the overall tone suggests.
- Nudity/partial nudity: one male ghost is often shown without pants, though coverage and blur effects limit what is visible.
- Language: profanity is generally mild, but there are recurring uses of words like "hell," "damn," and "crap."
- Alcohol and drug references: adults are sometimes shown drinking, and there are mild references to past drug use.
If you want, I can also give you a more age-specific recommendation like "safe for 8+," "better for 10+," or "best for teens only."