After three seasons, Leah Remini’s Scientology series is ending — but not before dropping more bombshells.

The A&E docuseries “Scientology and the Aftermath,” which examines the controversial organization, has not been canceled. Rather, Remini decided to end it on Aug. 26 with a two-hour special — taped before a live studio audience of former Scientology members.

The final episode will dig deep into allegations of rape against “That ’70s Show” star and Scientologist Danny Masterson, sources tell The Hollywood Reporter, and feature interviews with two of his accusers — who sued Masterson and the church Wednesday for allegedly stalking them.

The finale will also focus on the wider issue of assault accusations within the church, and allegations that official policies prohibit members from reporting instances of abuse to authorities.

“Aftermath,” which premiered in 2016, has been a ratings hit and scored several Emmy nods. Remini, a former Scientologist-turned-anti-Scientology activist, says she never planned for the show to go on for more than one to two seasons.

see also Church of Scientology: 'Leah Remini has blood on her hands' The Church of Scientology reached out to The Post Friday... , Remini said doing the show is “emotionally draining.” Her plan all along has been to get the church’s tax-exempt status revoked, she told The Post.

“Ultimately it needs its tax-exempt status taken [away], so they can stop using the millions of dollars they use each year to follow and harass people and bully them into silence. Churches have tax-exempt status because you’re supposed to be helping and servicing the public.”

When “Scientology and the Aftermath” ends, she will still work to “bring real justice to victims of Scientology but also prevent it from happening in the future — particularly with children.” But as she told The Hollywood Reporter, “I’m not dumb enough to give Scientology a heads up on what we’re planning exactly.”