They’ve raced together.
They’ve fought together.
They’ve bled together.
But in Fast: Family Betrayed, the unthinkable happens — one of their own turns against them.
The film opens in the middle of a high-stakes extraction in Morocco. The crew is running smooth, perfectly timed — until everything goes wrong. Alarms trigger too early. Backup is waiting. The plan fails. They barely escape.
Someone set them up.
Back at the garage, tensions rise. Dom refuses to believe it. Letty trusts her instincts. Roman suspects everyone. And Tej starts digging through encrypted transmissions — what he finds shocks them all:
The leak came from inside.
Clues begin to point to someone they’ve loved and trusted — someone who’s always been there: Ramsey.
But it’s not that simple. As they try to confront her, she disappears, erasing all traces. The team splits — some believe she’s gone rogue, others believe she’s protecting them from something bigger.
Soon, a new enemy steps in — an AI surveillance syndicate using stolen Fast Family intel to dismantle every global safehouse, car vault, and legacy contact they’ve ever used. Their entire past is being erased. One by one.
Only Ramsey has the override codes. And only she knows why she did what she did.
When the final confrontation happens, it isn’t violent. It’s personal. In an abandoned Tokyo rooftop garage, Dom finally finds her — standing over Brian’s old car.
She turns, tears in her eyes:
“I didn’t betray you.
I saved you.
You just weren’t ready to hear the truth.”
A flash drive hits the floor.
Inside it? Every secret Dom thought he buried.
The screen fades to black as her voice echoes:
“This isn’t the end of the family…
It’s the beginning of the truth.”
In Family Betrayed, the line between hero and traitor blurs — and trust becomes the most dangerous race of all.