‘Temptation Island’ just arrived on Netflix on April 10, marking the U.S. franchise’s 10th season and the streamer’s second season since reviving the show in 2025. Netflix’s decision to drop every episode at once is a deliberate bid to drive global binge viewing and short‑form social clips that keep the conversation burning for weeks after launch.
The core facts are straightforward: Netflix lists nine one‑hour episodes, all available immediately, and Mark L. Walberg returns as host. The season — which some catalogs may call season 2 of the Netflix revival but is the 10th installment of the U.S. franchise overall — was filmed in Hawaii and brings back the “Temptation Haven” twist, giving singles and couples private, camera‑free time that promises fresh drama.
Format-wise the show remains unchanged: four couples at a crossroads split into separate villas and surrounded by singles who test their commitment. Expect bonfire revelations, awkward footage viewings, and the now‑familiar decisions at the finale where participants choose to leave together, leave alone or begin something new. Episode titles released alongside the listing include “Bring on the Temptation,” “Temptation Haven” and “The Final Bonfire.”
Will international subscribers be able to watch on day one? Yes—Netflix will make the season available in the U.S., U.K., Canada and Australia on April 10 (and it appears in many global catalogs simultaneously). If you’re traveling and your usual library is blocked, a VPN can restore access to your home region—NordVPN was recommended in early coverage for reliability, though subscribers can use any reputable service to access their standard account while abroad.
Social reaction is likely to be immediate. Dating shows perform extremely well on TikTok and short‑form platforms, where clips of confrontations and surprises drive discovery. Early searches on Netflix and spike alerts in social listening tools already showed interest climbing in the hours before launch—an expected pattern for binge drops that create a condensed rush of conversation. (That concentrated chatter often matters more than steady weekly numbers.)
Industry implication: Netflix’s all‑at‑once approach positions the series to feed both binge‑watch metrics and the micro‑clip economy—producers win a big first-week audience, while creators harvest shareable moments for weeks after. Historically, platforms that pair reality formats with a single‑day release see faster global buzz but shorter weekly retention—so the opening weekend will be key.
What to watch for next: viewership and audience engagement data will surface in the days after release, and trade trackers will note whether the show cracks Netflix’s top 10 lists in multiple territories. For viewers: all nine episodes are live now; tune in if you want the full roller coaster in one sitting. Ready to watch?