Box office The Forever Purge grossed $44.5 million in the United States and Canada, and $32.5 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $77 million. The film made $5.4 million on its first day, including $1.3 million from Thursday night previews, the lowest amount of the franchise. It went on to debut to $12.7 million, finishing third at the box office. With the top three films at the box office,
F9,
Family Business, and
The Forever Purge, all having been released by Universal, it marked the first time a single studio had done so since February 2005. The film fell 43.1% in its sophomore weekend to $7.1 million, finishing fourth, then made $4.2 million in its third weekend, finishing in sixth.
Critical response On the
review aggregator website
Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 49% based on 161 reviews, with an average rating of 5.4/10. The site's critics consensus reads: "
The Forever Purge fails to fully engage with its most frighteningly timely themes, but the franchise remains largely—albeit bluntly—effective." The site's audience consensus reads: "It's more predictable and less satisfying than some other Purge movies, but franchise fans looking for action will find it here." On
Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 53 out of 100, based on 33 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews. Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B−" on an A+ to F scale, while
PostTrak reported 72% of audience members gave it a positive score, with 53% saying they would definitely recommend it. Reviewing for
The A.V. Club, Anya Stanley gave the film a "D" grade, and said: "In
The Forever Purge, we're told a story that a battered nation has heard a lot—a sermon of immigration and class warfare that's too heavy-handed to say anything its prospective audience hasn't been told on countless social media feeds over the last few years." Rick Bentley's review in
Tribune News Service complained of "a thinly veiled attempt to capitalize on the tensions currently gripping this country. The film’s deep dive into racism comes across as manipulative, trite and uninspired." Dustin Chase wrote in
The Galveston Daily News, "
The Forever Purge comes to Texas to try to redefine stale franchise." Johnny Oleksinski's review in
The New York Post stated: "That idea was fun once, maybe even twice, but by the fifth outing the formula has given way to preachiness and predictability." Writing in
The Detroit News, Adam Gram stated: "The fifth
Purge talks a big game, employing all sorts of charged political words and theories, but doesn't do anything interesting with them." Peter Vonder Haar's review in
The Houston Press analyzed: "The biggest problem with
The Forever Purge is how it abandons the central conceit of the series. Previous movies focused on the protagonists' struggle to survive until the end of the Purge while simultaneously giving us wider looks at the phenomenon itself. Here, with the murderousness extending indefinitely, the characters' situation is indistinguishable from any of a thousand other shoot-em-ups." Candace McMillan wrote in
Seattle Refined that the film is "ultimately just a tiresome rehash of an overused adage. It's making an obvious statement about the callous attitude we as Americans take with those less fortunate, without accounting for the many complications and intricacies within our nation as well. But shock, awe, and letdown is all that's left of a franchise that's been bled dry." Benjamin Lee's review in
The Guardian reads, "It’s more of the same in the latest
Purge horror, with more murderous mayhem and more half-baked attempts at social commentary. Matthew Mongale's review for
The Austin Chronicle dismissed the film as "pretty much by the numbers", while Nick Rogers in
The Midwest Film Journal called the film: "The creative exhaustion of a once-engaging franchise." Ian Freer in
Empire wrote: "The fifth
Purge outing goes for broke and comes out wanting, working neither as political commentary nor horror-action-thriller." Writing for the site
Slashfilm, Chris Evangelista states " The gunfire is constant, to the point where it becomes numbing. And after a while, you somehow grow bored with all the carnage. There's no emotional heft attached to anything happening here; we barely even care about the main characters...None of this is that thrilling, and
The Forever Purge often plays like a film cobbled together from reshoots and studio notes." ==Sequel==