Real Housewives of Salt Lake City Season 6 Release Date
The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City season 6 is landing on Bravo on September 16, 2025, at 8 p.m. ET/PT, with a juicy big premiere episode. I feel like the anticipation this year is kind of hilarious—the way Salt Lake City’s housewives pull off drama and high-altitude shade pretty much guarantees that the Twitter threads will be a mess by midnight. Not to mention, anyone who’s tried to keep up with last season’s messes (Meredith, those Greek references, Lisa’s snow boots, and—oh—Mary’s utter bewilderment at anything outside her comfort zone) knows that Salt Lake packs an emotional punch somewhere between soap opera and snowball fight. I honestly never thought I’d scream-laugh at resort fashion choices, but season 5 converted me.
Here’s my take: RHOSLC is a wild, occasionally weird snowglobe of personalities, where conflict is sparkly, and apology tours are sometimes interrupted by, say, a squad of yacht crew members from Below Deck Down Under. Yes, that crossover is happening this season, apparently because international travel and shenanigans are the only way to top last year’s “Greek tragedy” vibes. Seriously, if you’re looking for realism in a reality show, Salt Lake City delivers—just not in the way anyone expects. Meredith Marks is back (throwing curveballs), Lisa Barlow’s voice will echo through your living room, and Heather Gay, Angie Katsanevas, and the rest are in for global adventures. I bet Britani Bateman pops up with some memorably awkward moments too.
You know how Bravo’s cast shake-ups usually make fans nervous? Not so much here—the main group has a kind of scrappy charm that makes you root for them even when they’re trash-talking each other over Veuve Cliquot (not much of that this time, apparently). Watching Whitney Rose decide whether she trusts the group is like watching someone play chess and Twister at the same time. Always entertaining, sometimes excruciating, never boring. I once tried to convince a friend to binge this series by showing clips of the “ice fishing” episode and got a text back that just said, “Wait, why are they wearing Chanel?” Which, fair point, but it’s the magic of the show: high fashion meets low temperature meets high drama.
The premiere is scheduled for September 16, but if you’re near New York City, the network’s hosting a watch party for fans on September 9, letting people catch episode one before the group texts start flying. Better believe I’ll be watching for spoilers on Instagram that week. The cast list remains mostly unchanged, which is good news—consistency brings more opportunities for outrageous quotes, next-level feuds, and weirdly heartfelt moments that sneak up on you (even if you claim not to care).
Salt Lake City’s Housewives don’t have the sprawling luxury of Beverly Hills or the chaotic energy of Atlanta, but what they do have is authenticity—sometimes messy, sometimes sharp, sometimes genuinely funny. It’s the guilty pleasure I didn’t know I needed during a mountain of mundane Tuesdays. And honestly, after five seasons, my favorite moments are the ones that feel slightly ad hoc: Heather’s logical yet somehow totally illogical reasoning during a fight, Mary’s puzzled reaction to pop culture references, the awkward group trip with way too much cashmere packed for a tropical escape (old habits die hard).
If you’re ready for season six, get your snacks ready, set your Bravo reminders, and let the snowflakes—and the shade—fly. RHOSLC isn’t perfect, and neither is its cast, but it’s real enough to win over even the skeptics. Just don’t expect the drama to ever really thaw out. See you at the premiere party, where every confessional is guaranteed to be a little savage and a lot entertaining.