Love Is Blind Couples Still Together in 2024

Which Love Is Blind Couples Are Still Together

Love Is Blind has gotten complicated with all the breakup news, reunion drama, and conflicting “sources” flying around. As someone who has tracked this show since Season 1 landed on Netflix in February 2020, I learned everything there is to know about which couples actually survived — and which ones quietly deleted each other from Instagram six months after the cameras left. Today, I will share it all with you.

Across six U.S. seasons through 2024, the show produced roughly 23 engaged couples. Fewer than a third are still together. That number gets smaller every time a reunion special airs. No pod recaps. No drama blow-by-blow. Just verified statuses, as of 2024.

Season 1 Couples — Who Survived and Who Didn’t

But what is Season 1’s legacy, really? In essence, it’s the one season where a couple made it look genuinely possible. But it’s much more than that — it set the benchmark every season since has quietly failed to clear.

Lauren Speed and Cameron Hamilton — Still Together

The anchors. Lauren and Cameron filmed in 2018 — the season aired two years later — and they are still going in 2024. Co-hosting a YouTube channel together, showing up at Netflix events, being publicly boring in the best possible way. No cryptic posts. No separation rumors. Just two people who seem to actually like each other. That’s what makes them endearing to us viewers who have watched everyone else implode.

Amber Pike and Matt Barnett — Still Together

Honestly, this one surprised me more than Cameron and Lauren. Barnett and Amber had chaotic energy on screen — the fanbase gave them maybe eight months, tops. Six years later, still married. Amber has been candid in interviews about real financial strain early on. Not curated happiness. Actual survival. Points for longevity, genuinely.

Gigi and Damian — Broke Up

Damian said no at the altar. They tried again post-show. That also ended. Done.

Jessica Batten and Mark Cuevas — Broke Up

Jessica said no — the age gap was the stated reason. She was 34, he was 24. Mark later married Aubrey Rainey, not from the show, and they have kids. Jessica has largely stepped away from public life. Clean ending, more or less.

Kelly Chase and Kenny Barnes — Broke Up

Kelly said no at the altar. They were genuinely kind about it, which is rarer than it should be on this show. Both moved on privately. Nothing dramatic to report.

Seasons 2 Through 4 — The Messy Middle Years

So, without further ado, let’s dive in — because this is where the success rate craters and the stories get complicated fast.

Season 2 — Iyanna McNeill and Jarrette Jones — Divorced

Married on the show. Seemed stable. Then in 2022, less than a year after the reunion, they announced separation and filed for divorce. Jarrette was later linked to Shaina Bhullar — also from Season 2 — which did not land well publicly. Iyanna moved on gracefully. Jarrette, less so.

Season 2 — Danielle Ruhl and Nick Thompson — Divorced

Filed in 2022. Danielle was open about it — she said the show’s format accelerated problems that already existed, didn’t create them. No villain. No scandal. Two people who weren’t a long-term match. One of the more sympathetic exits the show has produced.

Season 2 — Deepti Vempati and Shake Chatterjee — He Said No

Shake said no at the altar after spending most of the season making comments about Deepti’s appearance that audiences found genuinely uncomfortable. Deepti became a fan favorite. She went on to appear in Perfect Match on Netflix. Shake attempted a media rehabilitation — results were mixed, to put it charitably.

Season 3 — Colleen Reed and Matt Bolton — Married, Status Uncertain

They got married despite real drama around Matt’s friendship with another cast member’s fiancée. As of early 2024, social media suggests they’re still together — but posts have thinned out. Not confirmed broken up. Not loudly thriving either. Call it a yellow light.

Season 3 — SK Alagbada and Raven Ross — Broke Up

SK said yes at the altar. Then post-reunion, it emerged he had been in another relationship while the show was airing. Raven confirmed the split. It was messy — the specific kind of messy that follows someone around for a while.

Season 4 — Tiffany Pennywell and Brett Brown — Still Together

The Season 4 success story, full stop. Married, stayed married, still showing up on each other’s social media consistently through 2024. Brett posts regularly. They have almost entirely avoided the post-show reality TV drama cycle. Good for them — and I mean that without sarcasm.

Season 4 — Zack Goytowski and Bliss Poureetezadi — Still Together

Zack originally got engaged to Irina, who was widely regarded as unkind to him throughout filming. That fell apart quickly. He and Bliss had a genuine connection in the pods — the show engineered a second-chance structure — and they married at the altar. As of 2024, still together. Bliss announced a pregnancy in late 2023. Their daughter was born in 2024. That’s a real outcome.

Probably should have opened with this section, honestly. The middle seasons carry the most drama and the highest breakup density by a significant margin.

Seasons 5 and 6 — The Newest Couples

Freshest data points. Treat these statuses as current through mid-2024 — and subject to change the next time someone drops a breakup statement at 11pm on a Tuesday, which is apparently when these things get posted.

Season 5 — Lydia Velez Gonzalez and Milton Johnson — Still Together

Married on the show. Milton was a consistent fan favorite — calm, steady, apparently the same off-camera as on. They’ve been active together on social through 2024. One of the more stable recent pairings the show has managed to produce.

Season 5 — Aaliyah Cosby and Uche Okoroha — Never Made It to the Altar

Uche was removed from the process after information surfaced about a prior relationship with another cast member. Aaliyah left without an engagement. Short chapter.

Season 6 — AD Smith and Clay Gravesande — She Said No

Clay spent most of the season voicing uncertainty about marriage as a concept. AD — having heard enough — said no at the altar. Viewers largely applauded the decision. Clay has since expressed public regret. AD appears, by all visible indicators, to be doing fine.

Season 6 — Chelsea Blackwell and Jimmy Presnell — Broke Up

Jimmy said no at the altar. The season also became notable for Chelsea’s comments comparing herself to Megan Fox — which generated significant internet attention for a solid news cycle. They have not rekindled anything since.

Season 6 — Jeramey Luttrull and Laura Dadisman — She Said No

Laura said no after it emerged during filming that Jeramey had been in contact with another cast member — Sarah Ann Bick — in a way that raised obvious questions. Most viewers supported Laura’s call. Jeramey and Sarah Ann were later reported to be dating after the show wrapped. Don’t make my mistake of being surprised by that particular development.

Why So Few Love Is Blind Couples Actually Last

Run the numbers — it’s rough. Of roughly 23 engagements across six seasons, around 6 or 7 couples are still together as of 2024. That hovers somewhere between 25 and 30 percent. And that’s being generous about a few couples whose statuses remain genuinely unclear.

The format does something real to people. Emotional intimacy accelerates fast inside the pods — no appearances, no outside noise, just two people talking for hours. That feels genuine because it often is. Then real life arrives. Shared finances. Incompatible schedules. The specific, grinding irritations of actually living with someone. The couples who stuck — Lauren and Cameron, Tiffany and Brett, Zack and Bliss — tend to talk about their relationships the same way: like something they actively maintain, not something the show handed them.

I’m apparently someone who has watched every season and reunion back-to-back, and the pattern holds up every time. The ones who didn’t make it almost always describe the same arc: real in the pods, then real life showed up and it wasn’t enough.

That’s what makes the rare success story endearing to us viewers — we’ve seen how consistently it doesn’t work. For what it’s worth, this success rate isn’t dramatically worse than The Bachelor franchise, running since 2002, which has produced maybe a handful of lasting marriages from hundreds of contestants. Dating shows are not great at building marriages. They’re great at making content. Worth keeping in mind before the next season drops and we start rooting again anyway.

If this breakdown helped, check out our comparisons between Love Is Blind’s format and other Netflix dating shows — including Perfect Match and Too Hot to Handle — to see which ones carry the worst long-term track records across the board.

Mike Reynolds

Mike Reynolds

Author & Expert

Mike Reynolds has been covering reality TV since 2008, starting as a forum moderator for Kitchen Nightmares fan communities. He spent six years working in the restaurant industry before pivoting to entertainment journalism. When he is not tracking down closure updates, he is probably rewatching old Bar Rescue episodes for the third time.

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