I fell down a Love Island rabbit hole last night at 2 a.m., and now I have THOUGHTS.
You start with one reunion clip, and suddenly it’s three hours later, deep-diving into which couples are still together. Wildly enough, some of these relationships actually lasted longer than my last situationship.
The Couples Who Made It Work (Shocking, Honestly)
Surprisingly sweet success stories exist.
Molly-Mae & Tommy: Everyone expected them to crash and burn. Years later, they have a baby, a house, and seem genuinely happy. Reality TV relationship goals? Kind of.
Camilla & Jamie (Season 3): The quiet couple no one remembered caused no drama—but stayed together. Turns out boring on TV = functional in real life.
The Breakups That Broke Our Hearts
Ekin-Su & Davide: The winners of their season, obsessed with each other, and then—poof—split. Public statements, cryptic Instagram posts. Messy but educational for spotting red flags.
Amber & Greg (Season 5): Won together, but Greg dumped her two weeks later. Amber handled it with grace. Queen behavior.
Couples Who Are “Just Friends” Now
Some break up but maintain close friendships, posting cute content together.
Curtis & Maura: Dancing around each other on social media for a while. Mature, confusing, and very “we’re better as friends.”
Where They’re Living Now
Many end up in influencer-style neighborhoods, doing sponsored posts. Others pursued real careers: Amber back in beauty therapy, Camilla in conservation work. Not everyone is #ad content 24/7.
The Instagram Deep Dive
To track Love Island couples:
- Look for tagged photos or archived posts
- Monitor following/unfollowing patterns
- Watch for subtle soft launches of new relationships (hand shots, cropped photos)
Unexpected Friendship Groups
Some islanders bond across seasons. They go on holidays together, support businesses, and show up for milestones—like adult friendships built on shared experiences.
The Ones Who Disappeared
Some vanish completely: delete social media, return to normal jobs, avoid interviews. A few discuss mental health struggles from sudden fame, trolling, and pressure to stay relevant. Respect.
My Hot Takes
- Couples who had real conversations in the villa (life goals, values) fare better
- Couples who don’t force brand content together last longer
- Relationships forming post-show, between islanders from different seasons, often feel more genuine
The Current Status
- Recent season couples: figuring things out; some engaged, some “taking it slow,” some quietly broken up
- Older seasons: mostly settled or moved on; few in limbo
What This All Means
Reality TV relationships are under extreme pressure: short dating windows, constant public scrutiny, and brand expectations. The couples that survive? They treat the show as the start, not the whole relationship, and do the real-life work after cameras stop.
The Bottom Line
Love Island couples are now:
- Married with kids
- Single and thriving
- In new relationships outside the show
- Staying friends
- Pretending it never happened
Despite the odds and the cynicism, some of these couples genuinely made it. If they can find love in a villa in Mallorca under national scrutiny, maybe there’s hope for the rest of us navigating modern dating too.
Or maybe I just need to stop binge-watching reunion specials until 2 a.m.
Probably both.
