Jeremy Clarkson has announced he is in remission from prostate cancer, days after he shared that he was living with the disease. The 66-year-old TV presenter confirmed to the Sunday Times that follow-up testing two months ago showed no indication of cancer, making him "without a doubt, officially, the world's luckiest man."

During the latest episode of Clarkson's Farm, Clarkson revealed he had been diagnosed with an "aggressive" form of the cancer in 2025. "It could have spread, it could have gone into the pancreas, it could have gone anywhere, and that would have been trouble," he told the Sunday Times. The diagnosis came after a routine medical check in May 2025, leading to the removal of a portion of his prostate.

In a video shared over the weekend on Instagram, Clarkson noted: "You will have noticed that I'm not dead. The reason why I'm fine is because the doctors caught the prostate cancer early, and they caught it early because I got tested." He urged followers to get tested, warning that 12,000 men die every year in the UK from prostate cancer. Clarkson now undergoes regular blood tests and acknowledges a 40% chance of recurrence, but has "decided to be one of the 60% who doesn't have a recurrence."

The former Top Gear and Grand Tour presenter's health has been a theme of the fifth series of Clarkson's Farm, which ended dramatically with him in a hospital bed telling viewers: "If this is all successful, I'll see you for season six, and if it isn't, I won't." Before his cancer diagnosis, Clarkson underwent a heart procedure in October 2024, getting two stents fitted to prevent a potentially fatal heart attack. Because apparently one brush with mortality wasn't enough.