Despite early chatter about a softer opening compared to The Way of Water (roughly $46 million less), James Cameron’s Avatar: Fire and Ash is proving to be far from a disappointment.
The film crossed $450 million worldwide before Christmas Eve, a strong indicator of healthy legs—especially during one of the busiest moviegoing corridors of the year. Historically, the period from December 24 through January 3 delivers massive box office gains, and Fire and Ash is well positioned to capitalize.
While it may not reach the stratospheric heights of the previous Avatar entries, the movie is clearly settling into “major hit” territory.
The first two Avatar films rank #4 and #7 among the highest-grossing domestic releases of all time, and #1 and #3 internationally. Against that backdrop, anything under $600 million domestic can feel like a step down.
That said, expectations at that level are almost impossible to meet. By any reasonable standard, Fire and Ash is performing extremely well.
Very possibly. The current domestic box office leader for 2025 is A Minecraft Movie with $423 million. Given its momentum, Fire and Ash could surpass that total, making it the highest-grossing movie of the year, even if it doesn’t match Cameron’s previous record-setters.
Over the core holiday stretch, Avatar: Fire and Ash is expected to earn around $70-80 million, with minimal competition:
While those figures may sound modest, the following week is traditionally just as strong for theaters.
If Fire and Ash adds another $50–60 million in the following week, it could exit the holiday corridor with a domestic total near $300 million—a very solid outcome by any metric. Considering how little competition it has in January, a $400-450 final gross seems likely.
Not even close. Labeling this performance a “disappointment” ignores the broader context, the holiday box office surge, and the reality that few films—if any—can compete with Cameron’s own past successes.
What are you seeing in theaters over the holidays? Let us know in the comments.