The Season 10 Summer House reunion will run in three parts for the first time, with Part 1 set to air live Tuesday, May 26, 2026, at 8 p.m. ET on Bravo and the uncensored, extended editions available the next day on Peacock.
Amanda Batula, who became the center of a season-long relationship controversy, is among the cast expected to face questions head-on when the reunion begins; all three parts will air live on Bravo and Peacock will stream extended, uncensored cuts the following day, with subscription plans starting at $7.99 per month.
The scale of the moment is unmistakable: the reunion was filmed April 23, 2026, and was later described by the show’s host as one of the most intense he has ever shot. Producers have chosen a three-part, live format — a move that guarantees immediate reaction from the cast and viewers when the first installment drops at 8 p.m. ET on May 26.
That intensity owes much to the pair at the center of the season’s fallout. Batula and West Wilson confirmed their romance in March 2026 and issued an official joint confirmation on March 31, 2026. West Wilson has given multiple public updates: on April 20 he told his Show Me Something podcast that he did not pursue anything with Batula until after she and Kyle Cooke announced their separation in January 2026, saying, “There was no overlap.” On the May 25, 2026, episode of the same podcast he told host Sophie Cunningham that he and Batula were still together and said, “Doing our best,” while calling going out in public as a couple “kind of scary.”
Context matters: the Season 10 cast has been navigating a relationship scandal, a divorce bombshell and a controversial audio leak since filming wrapped last August. Producers and cast members — including Amanda Batula, West Wilson, Kyle Cooke and Ciara Miller — are expected to address the romance and its fallout during the reunion, which will now play out in real time across three live chapters.
The narrative on screen and off is not tidy. In the series premiere of In The City, Kyle Cooke asked Batula whether she had an “emotional affair” with Wilson; Batula denied that anything was happening between her and Wilson while she was still committed to her marriage. Wilson has repeatedly said he waited until after Batula’s January separation to pursue her and plainly denied any overlap. The pair’s public confirmation in March and a private trip one day after Wilson’s May 25 podcast episode — they were spotted jetting off to Italy, which sources close to the couple told TMZ was for Wilson’s cousin’s wedding — tighten the spotlight on how the story will be unpacked live on stage.
There is also an outside chorus: Khloé Kardashian has been vocal about watching the franchise, telling listeners she “started watching Real Housewives of Rhode Island. These girls are so funny. It’s hysterical,” and adding, “This show, you can tell they were definitely friends prior to this.” She moved on to Summer House, saying, “I’m watching Summer House. That’s just like crazy drama. Can’t wait for the reunion.” Cast member Paige DeSorbo commented on Kardashian’s Instagram carousel, “Okay, so we’re best friends,” to which Kardashian replied, “Pretty much.”
The live, three-part format and next-day uncensored streaming make one outcome clear: the reunion will not be a contained conversation. The structure guarantees immediate, widely available footage for those who want unfiltered moments, and the timing — Part 1 on May 26 at 8 p.m. ET, followed by extended Peacock cuts — ensures viewers can compare the live spectacle with fuller versions almost instantly.
Expect the Reunion to focus squarely on the Batula-Wilson relationship and the competing public accounts; given how the reunion was described after filming and how the couple has continued to present a united front, the odds are high that the three-part live run will deepen, not settle, the season’s central conflict for viewers watching on bravo tv and Peacock.




