Ben and Erin Napier have been the steady heartbeat of HGTVâs Home Town universe since the franchise beganâtwo familiar faces viewers associate with warmth, craftsmanship, and the kind of small-town pride that feels genuine. So when news started circulating that the couple wonât be hosting a future Home Town spinoff, it landed like a curveball. Not because theyâre stepping away from the brand entirely, but because the reason behind it isnât about burnout, scheduling drama, or a creative rift.

Itâs about legality.
In a recent conversation with CinemaBlend, Erinâwho has built her television identity around design, storytelling, and the details that make a house feel like a homeâexplained that she and Ben arenât âlegally allowedâ to host the upcoming season of Home Town Takeover. That phrase alone sounds jarring. After all, this is a couple that has led Home Town from the start, and the Takeover concept fits their mission perfectly: go into a community, roll up sleeves, and help transform the places that shape peopleâs daily lives.
But this season is different because the show is crossing a border.
HGTVâs synopsis has always framed Home Town Takeover as a large-scale, community-centered renovation projectâBen, 42, Erin, 40, and a team of HGTV renovators helping ârevitalize a small townâ by renovating homes, businesses, and community spaces tied to local changemakers. Now, for the first time, the series is heading to Canada. And according to Erin, filming in a new country doesnât just mean different weather, different supply chains, or new architecture. It means new broadcasting rules.
Erin told the outlet that their production company for this season is Canadian, and that the people behind the scenes are deeply invested in making a Canadian takeover feel authentically Canadian. Thatâs where the twist comes in: because Ben and Erin are Americans, they canât sit in the hosting chair the way they normally would. Erin described their role in a way that makes the limitation crystal clearâthey can appear, but only as âguest stars,â not as the lead hosts steering the season.

Ben put it even more bluntly: a Canadian broadcast show has to be hosted by Canadian talent.
That requirement isnât just an informal preferenceâit connects to broader policy direction in Canada. The article points to November 2023, when the Minister of Canadian Heritage submitted new directions for the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. The intent, as described, was to support a âwide range of Canadian programming and Canadian creators.â And within that directive is a framework designed to ensure the system âmaximizes the use of Canadian creative and other human resourcesâ across the creation, production, and presentation of programming in Canadaâs broadcasting system.
In other words: when a show becomes part of that Canadian broadcasting space, Canadian participation isnât just encouragedâitâs baked into how the system is supposed to function. Thatâs why this isnât a case of HGTV deciding to swap them out for novelty. Itâs a structural rule of the road once production and broadcast fall under that Canadian umbrella.
Still, the emotional tone from Erin isnât disappointmentâitâs curiosity and excitement. She said sheâs eager to go to Canada because sheâs never been before, and she singled out summer as the season that would feel especially âmagical.â That little detail matters because it shows how the couple is framing this shift: not as a rejection, but as a new adventure where they can participate without being the official emcees.
And viewers wondering who will take over hosting duties wonât be left guessing forever. Ben shared that they already know who the new primary hosts areâand that they approve. He added a specific tease: itâs another husband-and-wife team, and he said they âreally like them.â That endorsement reads like a quiet handoff, the kind that signals continuity rather than disruption.
HGTV, according to the piece, didnât immediately respond to PEOPLEâs request for comment, but the network isnât exactly pulling the Napiers from the spotlight. Fans who want the classic Erin-and-Ben version of Home Town still have something big to look forward to: season 10 is set to premiere on Jan. 4. The upcoming run includes 16 episodes and keeps the focus where itâs always beenâLaurel, Mississippi, and the coupleâs ongoing work reviving homes and historic locations with personal stakes and community roots.
HGTVâs own preview promises major projects: a makeover of the local hospitalâs maternity ward and waiting room, a transformation for Benâs brother Jesse and his growing family, and a remodel for a newly engaged couple who plans to host their wedding in their home. And as if that wasnât enough, the season is set to open with whatâs being described as the âbiggest Home Town overhaul yetââa project centered on a homeowner of five decades who needs help fixing their well-known home.
So the âshocking reasonâ they wonât host isnât scandal. Itâs not a feud. Itâs not a sudden career pivot. Itâs simply that when Home Town Takeover becomes Canadian for its next chapter, Canadian rules require Canadian hostsâmeaning Ben and Erin can only step in as guests, even on a franchise they helped define.