Hayu’s reality slate expands into the heart of Britain this August with The Real Housewives of London, a ten‑episode series that the streamer has positioned as its first self‑commissioned original. According to multiple reports, the programme will premiere on 18 August 2025 and land exclusively on Hayu in the UK, marking a deliberate push into homegrown reality content for the platform.

The cast is a six‑strong mix of entrepreneurs, creatives and social figures drawn from across the capital’s social and business scenes. The Independent’s profile names Juliet Angus, Panthea Parker, Juliet Mayhew, Karen Loderick‑Peace, Nessie Welschinger and Amanda Cronin — giving ages and short biographies that underline the group’s varied backgrounds, from influencer and beauty‑business founder to a former actress turned creative producer. Promotional material and show pages supplied by TV Insider and others echo that line‑up and the series premise.

Viewers can expect the familiar hallmarks of the franchise — lavish dinners, luxury escapes and a reunion special — with Canadian comedian Katherine Ryan confirmed to host the post‑series gathering. Chortle reported Ryan’s enthusiasm for the role, noting she describes herself as a fan of the format and intends to represent viewers when she interrogates the cast. Mediaweek and other trade outlets say episodes will be released weekly across a ten‑episode run, culminating in Ryan’s reunion.

Behind the cameras the series is being produced by Universal Television Alternative Studio UK Productions (UTAS/UTAS UK), the team responsible for other high‑profile British reality formats. Industry reporting frames the commission as a collaboration between Hayu and an experienced alternative‑entertainment production unit, with links made to producers who have worked on similar London‑set unscripted shows.

The show’s publicity and early interviews position The Real Housewives of London as both entertainment and a lens on contemporary womanhood. Cast interviews published in The Independent stress themes of empowerment, modern femininity and cultural diversity — lines the producers and Hayu have used in promoting the series as a British iteration of the global franchise.

Several of the housewives spoke candidly about what the label “housewife” means to them in the 21st century. Juliet Mayhew told The Independent that “the greatest honour and the greatest roles I’ve ever had the privilege to play are wife and mother,” while Karen Loderick‑Peace described the title as empowering because it reflects running a household alongside professional life. Those reflections are threaded throughout the show’s promotional interviews.

London itself is presented in the publicity as a character in its own right: cast members highlight the city’s toughness, multicultural make‑up and formative role in their stories. Nessie Welschinger referenced her upbringing in a multicultural home and argued that the series “brings out the best of London,” while Amanda Cronin spoke about the city shaping both her personal and professional choices. These remarks underpin the series’ claim to represent a distinctly London take on the franchise.

Hayu executives have framed the commission as a strategic milestone. According to trade reporting, Hayu’s leadership sees an original, locally produced Housewives edition as a way to deepen the platform’s international catalogue and attract new subscribers with a familiar global brand tailored to British tastes. Advanced Television quoted Hayu’s Hendrik McDermott on the importance of original commissions to the streamer’s strategy.

The Real Housewives format has proved durable: the franchise began with The Real Housewives of Orange County in 2006 and has since expanded into numerous US cities and international adaptations. Wikipedia and press coverage chart that evolution, situating the London edition as the franchise’s 30th instalment and part of a long tradition of regionally focused, personality‑led reality television. Hayu and the producers will now test whether that formula translates to a London audience in the streaming era.

For viewers, the practical details are straightforward: The Real Housewives of London will be available on Hayu from 18 August 2025, with episodes rolling out across the weeks that follow and a reunion special hosted by Katherine Ryan to close the run. Industry pages and promotional material set expectations for the show’s tone — glossy, confrontational at times, and firmly pitched as escapist entertainment — while the cast’s interviews underline a desire to be seen as businesswomen, mothers and Londoners first.

📌 Reference Map:

Reference Map:

Source: Noah Wire Services