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16 May 2026

Which Love Is Blind couples are still together and celebrating milestones

A roundup of Love Is Blind alumni who turned a social experiment into lasting relationships, with close looks at major life events

Which Love Is Blind couples are still together and celebrating milestones

The Netflix experiment Love Is Blind has produced more plot twists than many scripted shows, yet some couples who met in the pods have built lasting lives together. This piece gathers updates on the franchise’s most stable pairings, highlighting personal wins like new babies, books, podcasts and moving into homes. Whether you followed season one or tuned in more recently, these alumni show different ways a televised courtship can translate into sustained partnership.

Below you’ll find a focused profile on the show’s best-known success story, as well as snapshots of other couples who have remained together. Throughout, I point out recurring themes — openness about challenges, deliberate life choices, and how public-facing projects can complement private growth. Expect concrete milestones, exact dates where available, and a look at what these relationships reveal about long-term commitment after a reality show.

Spotlight: Lauren Speed-Hamilton and Cameron Hamilton

Few Love Is Blind alumni have matched the sustained attention given to Lauren Speed-Hamilton and Cameron Hamilton. The pair have expanded their public work with a YouTube channel called Hanging with the Hamiltons, launched a podcast titled The Love Seat in October 2026, and co-authored a book named Leap of Faith: Finding Love the Modern Way. On Oct. 1, 2026, they welcomed their first child, Ezra William Hamilton, a moment they described as the culmination of a long journey. In May 2026 Lauren had revealed they had been trying to conceive for four years, and the couple has spoken candidly about that process and the emotional toll it took.

Medical and emotional context

Lauren’s delivery came earlier than planned after she experienced preeclampsia, and Ezra arrived weighing 5 lbs., 15 oz., according to the couple’s public statements. Both parents have reflected on how the months of fertility work and the medical realities made the arrival feel particularly significant. Their openness about fertility struggles and the stress of navigating treatment has resonated with many fans who appreciated a candid perspective rather than a glossy, untroubled narrative.

Other couples who kept their relationships alive

Several other Love Is Blind duos have also translated on-screen romance into real-world stability. From earlier seasons to more recent casts, these couples have celebrated marriages, children and shared achievements while staying largely out of constant tabloid drama. Below are concise updates drawn from verifiable milestones the participants themselves announced or revealed on reunion episodes and social channels.

Notable pairings and milestones

Season 1 alumni Matt Barnett and Amber Pike remain part of the franchise’s roster of lasting matches. From season 4, Zack Goytowski and Bliss Poureetezadi tied the knot in May 2026 and welcomed a daughter named Galileo Terri Rayne less than two years later; they also announced at the season 10 reunion that a baby boy is on the way. Season 4 favorites Brett Brown and Tiffany Pennywell marked two years as a married couple in May 2026 and became homeowners in September 2026. From season 6, Johnny McIntyre and Amy Cortés married in May 2026, and Johnny even proposed again to celebrate their one-year anniversary. Season 7’s Garrett Josemans and Taylor Krause tied the knot in November 2026 and later celebrated their second anniversary. Season 8 pairing Daniel Hastings and Taylor Haag and season 10’s fan-favorite Vic St. John and Christine Hamilton have also reported positive progress, with Vic and Christine saying at their reunion that they were still strong almost a year after their wedding.

Lessons from lasting relationships after reality TV

Across these examples, a few patterns emerge. Many couples combine public-facing projects — podcasts, channels, books — with private commitment, suggesting that a shared endeavor can help couples align goals beyond the show. Several partners have been transparent about struggles such as infertility or medical complications, and that transparency seems to foster empathy from viewers and a support network outside the couple. Finally, deliberate milestones like buying a home or renewing vows act as stabilizing rituals that move the relationship away from the editing room and into everyday life.

Reality television rarely offers tidy conclusions, but the couples listed here demonstrate that long-term success is possible when partners prioritize communication, shared projects and real-world problem solving. For fans tracking these relationships, the combination of honest storytelling and measurable life events — from weddings to new babies — provides the clearest evidence that a televised beginning can lead to enduring partnership.

Author

Camilla Fiore

Camilla Fiore, from Verona, wrote her first review after testing a serum at the Cosmetics Fair: that article changed the editorial line devoted to product testing. She proposes columns with a rigorous approach and brings to the newsroom the precision of someone who collects old sample books.