The final episode of The Imposter doesn’t offer easy answers — and that’s exactly why it has sparked so much discussion. The four-part thriller closes with revelations about identity, loyalty, and betrayal that arrive late and land hard, leaving viewers to piece together what really happened.
By the time the credits roll, the series has transformed from a tense family drama into something darker: a story about how a single lie can unravel an entire household. Below is a clear, scene-by-scene breakdown of the finale, including how the deception is exposed and why the ending refuses neat justice.
Spoiler warning: The sections below discuss major plot twists and deaths from the final episode.
What The Imposter Is About
At the centre of the story is Helen O’Riley, a guarded hotel owner whose three adult children want her to sell the family’s valuable seaside business. The simmering conflict escalates when a stranger arrives, claiming to be Helen’s daughter — given up for adoption decades earlier.
Helen embraces the woman almost immediately, seeing her return as a chance to repair a lifetime of regret. Her children are far less convinced. As suspicion grows, the family begins to fracture, and what starts as an inheritance dispute spirals into manipulation, blackmail, and violence.
Who’s Who in the Final Episode
Helen O’Riley: Emotionally distant but deeply vulnerable, especially as her eyesight worsens. Her need to believe the reunion is real leaves her exposed.
Simon O’Riley: Calculated and ambitious, determined to secure control of the hotel — even as the situation turns deadly.
Kate O’Riley: The most sceptical sibling, who quietly pieces together evidence that the woman calling herself Amanda is not who she claims to be.
Ian O’Riley: The youngest sibling, whose discovery of the truth puts him directly in harm’s way.
“Amanda” / Claire: The imposter herself — a woman who inserts herself into the family with a calculated plan that grows increasingly violent.
What Happens in the Finale
The lie finally starts to unravel
Kate’s doubts harden into certainty when she uncovers inconsistencies in Amanda’s story. Her search leads her to Bill, the biological father of the real Amanda, confirming that the woman living with Helen is using a stolen identity.
The real daughter comes into focus
The real Amanda is alive and living in Perth with her own child. Unaware of the chaos unfolding in Helen’s household, she is eventually drawn into the situation, setting up a confrontation between truth and deception.
A ruthless grab for control
As Helen’s eyesight deteriorates, Claire pushes her to sign documents that effectively hand control of the hotel to Simon. What looks like emotional manipulation is also a calculated financial move.
Violence replaces secrecy
When Todd realises the truth and attempts to confront Claire, she responds with brute force, running him over and leaving him for dead. Simon witnesses the aftermath and is forced into complicity to protect himself.
The cliffside climax
In the finale’s most chilling sequence, Claire reveals her plan to stage Helen’s death as an accident. Instead, Simon turns on her, pushing Claire to her death and allowing her to take the blame for the devastation she helped create.
An ending without relief
Helen finally meets her real daughter only after everything has fallen apart. The reunion is subdued, underscoring the show’s central tragedy: the truth arrives too late to repair the damage.
Who Died — and Why
The series’ rising death toll is not random. Each death is directly linked to the original deception.
Ryder: Killed by Claire after becoming a threat to her scheme. His death is used to misdirect suspicion onto others.
Eden: Drowns after attempting to blackmail Todd with evidence connected to Ryder’s disappearance.
Ian O’Riley: Murdered by Claire after uncovering proof of her true identity.
Claire: Killed by Simon when her plan escalates to attempted murder, making her both architect and final victim of the deception.
Todd: Survives a hit-and-run but becomes part of the false narrative that protects Simon.
What the Ending Was Really Saying
The finale argues that imposters succeed not because they are clever, but because people want to believe them. Helen’s longing for redemption, Simon’s hunger for control, and the family’s existing mistrust create the perfect conditions for the lie to thrive.
Justice, the show suggests, is rarely clean. The imposter is gone, but the survivors are left with guilt, compromise, and a version of the truth that suits them best.
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The series has drawn attention for its slow-burn tension and morally grey characters, with critics noting how its final episode deliberately avoids tidy resolutions — an approach that has fuelled debate since it aired. The finale’s structure and twists have been widely discussed across UK entertainment coverage, including detailed episode analysis by Radio Times.










