Full CBS New B&B Tuesday, 2/24/2026 The Bold and The Beautiful Episode (February 24, 2026)

The February 24 episode of The Bold and the Beautiful picks up in the emotional wreckage of Eric Forrester’s latest health scare — and the shockwaves ripple far beyond the Forrester mansion. What unfolds is not just a story about a patriarch pushing himself too far, but about pride, insecurity, fractured communication, and a younger generation repeating the same mistakes as their parents.

At the center of the hour are two parallel crises: Eric fighting to preserve his identity, and Will Spencer watching his relationship with Electra Forrester collapse under the weight of blurred boundaries.


Eric Forrester: Fine Physically, Fractured Emotionally

The episode opens with reassurance — at least on the surface. EMTs have checked Eric out. He’s stable. There’s no dramatic hospital vigil this time. No life-or-death cliffhanger.

But “fine” is a relative term on a soap where stress is often more dangerous than illness.

Eric is soon seen apologizing to Ridge and Brooke for worrying them. It’s a moment that feels almost upside down: the founder of a fashion empire expressing remorse for frightening his son simply by pushing himself creatively.

Why is Eric apologizing?

That question lingers heavily throughout the episode.

For Eric, designing isn’t a hobby. It’s oxygen. After surviving a near-fatal health crisis not long ago, he made a silent promise to himself: if he came back, he would live fully. Resting in the mansion, watching others make decisions, feels like erasure.

But for Ridge, the sight of his father under pressure — deadlines looming, expectations mounting — triggers panic. Ridge has already watched Eric weaken once before. He refuses to risk history repeating itself.


Ridge’s Guilt — and Control

Ridge’s concern is genuine. That much is clear. But so is something else: control.

He struggles with the idea that Eric would secretly design for Katie Logan without confiding in him. To Ridge, the secrecy feels like betrayal — not because of the work itself, but because it suggests Eric doesn’t trust him.

This taps into an old wound. When Eric previously concealed the severity of his illness, Ridge spiraled. He equates secrecy with impending loss.

But this time, Eric insists it wasn’t about distrust. It was about autonomy.

He wanted to create without being monitored. Without someone checking his pulse every five minutes. Without being treated like fragile glass.

The tension between father and son becomes painfully human: one wants protection, the other wants dignity.

Brooke attempts to mediate, urging Ridge to reconsider how he approaches his father. And even Steffy is forced to reflect on whether their protective stance has crossed into suffocation.

The deeper issue becomes clear — Eric’s health scare isn’t just medical. It’s emotional. The pressure to prove he’s still relevant, still capable, may have contributed to the collapse.


Katie’s Role and the Weight of Deadlines

Though Katie isn’t front and center in every scene, her presence looms large. Eric’s decision to design for her venture is at the heart of the tension.

Was it too much too soon?

The show subtly explores whether the demands of launching a new line — even with good intentions — became overwhelming. Eric admits that the pressure and tight timelines were heavier than he anticipated.

But the episode resists placing blame squarely on Katie. Instead, it frames the issue as one of pride. Eric didn’t want to admit he was struggling. Ridge didn’t want to admit he might be overreacting.

Once again, communication breaks down inside the Forrester dynasty.


A Younger Generation in Crisis: Will and Electra

While the Forrester patriarch wrestles with identity, a new relationship crumbles at the beach house.

Will Spencer is reeling after Electra Forrester walked out. Their split stems from one volatile issue: Dylan’s presence in his home.

Dylan, a young woman with a traumatic past — including an accidental hit-and-run that resulted in Luna’s death — has been staying with Will. She’s vulnerable, displaced, and deeply complicated.

Electra made her discomfort clear. She asked for boundaries.

Will refused to ask Dylan to leave.

That decision becomes the breaking point.

In Tuesday’s episode, Will is visibly devastated by Electra’s departure. He insists he was only trying to help someone in need. He doesn’t see himself as choosing Dylan over Electra — he sees himself as being compassionate.

But compassion without boundaries has consequences.

Electra’s exit isn’t framed as jealousy. It’s framed as self-preservation. She refuses to remain in a relationship where her feelings are secondary to Will’s savior complex.


The Shadow of Luna and the Fear of Repetition

Complicating matters is the lingering trauma surrounding Luna. Once perceived as innocent, Luna ultimately revealed a darker, manipulative side. That betrayal still casts a shadow over the younger characters.

Electra can’t help but wonder: Is Dylan another misunderstood soul — or another ticking time bomb?

The show smartly plays with ambiguity. Dylan’s vulnerability appears genuine. But so did Luna’s, once upon a time.

Will, ever the “good Spencer,” wants to believe he can save someone who’s struggling. It’s a trait that mirrors his father Bill’s tendency to bulldoze through moral gray areas under the banner of protection.

And that parallel is impossible to ignore.


Ivy’s Mysterious Influence

Adding another layer to the drama is Ivy Forrester, whose return has not been subtle.

While the full extent of her involvement remains murky, it’s clear she has influenced Electra’s perception of Dylan. Whether through warning, manipulation, or strategic exaggeration, Ivy’s fingerprints are on the fracture.

Is she protecting family? Settling old scores with the Spencers? Or orchestrating chaos for reasons not yet revealed?

The episode plants seeds without giving away the harvest.


A Pattern Emerges

What makes Tuesday’s episode especially compelling is how neatly the two storylines mirror each other.

Ridge feels guilty for pushing Eric — but still wants to dictate his choices.
Will feels guilty about losing Electra — but still refuses to remove Dylan.

Both men claim to act out of protection.

Both resist compromise.

Both risk losing the women in their lives.

It’s a subtle commentary on generational cycles within the Forrester and Spencer families. Pride masquerading as righteousness. Protection morphing into stubbornness.


What Comes Next?

As the episode closes, uncertainty hangs thick in the air.

Eric insists he can manage his workload — but the strain is visible. Ridge must decide whether to trust his father or tighten his grip.

Will stands alone in the beach house, staring at the door Electra walked through. Dylan remains under his roof. The tension between obligation and desire simmers dangerously close to a breaking point.

Electra, meanwhile, may find herself confiding in Ivy — a move that could either empower her or push her further into manipulation.

The February 24 episode doesn’t deliver explosive twists. Instead, it deepens emotional fractures. It asks hard questions about autonomy, boundaries, and the cost of pride.

And in true Bold and the Beautiful fashion, it reminds viewers that sometimes the most devastating drama isn’t about villains or gunshots.

It’s about the moment someone says, “I’m trying to help” — and someone else hears, “You’re not listening.”