‘Queer Eye’ Will End with Season 10, Now Filming in Washington, D.C.

The Fab Five return for one final season of makeovers, mentorship, and meaningful change.

Netflix has officially confirmed that Queer Eye will come to a close with its upcoming 10th and final season, now in production in Washington, D.C.

After nearly a decade of transformations, the Emmy-winning series will wrap with a tribute to the lives it’s touched and the legacy it leaves behind.

Production Begins in the Nation’s Capital

Filming kicked off today in D.C., where the Fab Five Antoni Porowski, Jeremiah Brent, Jonathan Van Ness, Karamo, and Tan France are meeting a new group of local heroes for a final round of makeovers and emotional breakthroughs.

The final season will spotlight stories from the capital, honoring both the diversity of the city and the enduring mission of the show: to uplift everyday people with compassion, courage, and style.

A Record-Breaking Run

First launched in 2018 as a reboot of the original from the early 2000s, Queer Eye has become Netflix’s longest-running unscripted series. Over its run, it has received 37 Emmy nominations and 11 wins, including a record-setting six consecutive wins for Outstanding Structured Reality Program.

In addition to its Emmys, the show earned multiple Critics’ Choice Real TV Awards and was honored with a GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Reality Program, cementing its status as a cultural and industry standout.

Creative Team & Production

Queer Eye is produced by Scout Productions and ITV Entertainment:

  • Executive Producers (Scout): David Collins, Michael Williams, Rob Eric
  • Showrunner/EP: Jennifer Lane
  • Executive Producers (ITV): Jordana Hochman, Mark Bracero, Lyndsey Burr
  • Executive Producers (Fab Five): Jeremiah Brent, Karamo Brown, Tan France, Antoni Porowski, Jonathan Van Ness

While Season 10 will mark the end of this chapter, Queer Eye’s influence is far from over. The series changed the tone of makeover television, focusing less on appearances and more on affirmation, vulnerability, and growth. Its final season promises to hold true to that mission while offering a heartfelt goodbye to one of the most beloved unscripted series of the past decade.

Emma Armbrüster is Senior Editorial Critic at The Viewer’s Perspective. Based in Veneto, Italy, she specializes in deep-dive narrative analysis and episode-by-episode recaps of premier television, providing an independent vantage point on the modern streaming landscape.

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