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Emily Cooper is packing her statement wardrobe for one last European whirl, and this time Paris isn’t the only destination on the itinerary. Season 6 of Emily in Paris is filming across France, Greece, and Monaco, giving the show’s final chapter a very sun-soaked Mediterranean twist. Expect Mykonos beaches, Monaco glamour, Parisian cafés, and the kind of screen-ready locations that make viewers immediately start checking flights.
The final season is anchored by three big location shoots: Paris, Greece, and Monaco. Paris is still the emotional center of the show, but Season 6 is clearly expanding the fantasy. After years of café terraces, office drama, and very photogenic walks through the French capital, Emily is heading south for a finale with more yachts, beach clubs, and Mediterranean light.
Creator Darren Star confirmed the new locations in April 2026, and the Greek detour isn’t coming out of nowhere. It follows directly from where Season 5 left off. Filming began in May and is scheduled to run through September 30, giving the production a full summer window to capture Southern Europe at its most irresistible.
For fans, that means the filming schedule has practically become its own travel map. Every beach club, harbor, and cobblestone street that shows up on screen is likely to become part of the next wave of Emily in Paris set-jetting.
Image courtesy of Netflix
The biggest shift this season is Greece, and production wasted no time making the island look like a dream. Cameras began rolling at dawn on May 18 at Agios Sostis, a quieter, more secluded beach on Mykonos’s northern coast.
Lily Collins and Lucas Bravo were spotted filming scenes together on the sand, with local kids from the island playing football as extras in the background. Around 80 crew members were reportedly on site, turning the beach into a full-scale production set for the week.
The Mykonos shoot ran through May 26 and covered plenty of the island’s most recognizable spots. Beyond Agios Sostis, filming locations included the Kato Mili windmills, where two private windmills were rented for production, plus the boutique-lined alleys of Matogianni Street, the waterfront area of Little Venice, and the winding lanes of Chora town.
It’s a huge visual departure for the series, swapping Parisian rooftops and moody winter streets for whitewashed buildings, turquoise water, and that unmistakable Cyclades glow.
Monaco also gets a starring role in the final season, and honestly, it feels like exactly the kind of place this show was always destined to visit. If Paris gives Emily in Paris its romance, Monaco gives it the glossy, high-stakes version of European luxury: yacht harbors, casino entrances, cliffside roads, and Mediterranean views that look expensive before anyone even opens their mouth.
Filming is planned around Monte Carlo, including the casino district and the harbor areas that define Monaco’s ultra-polished image. The setting gives the show a natural home for Agence Grateau’s high-end client storylines, glamorous events, and probably at least one outfit that makes absolutely no practical sense near the sea but somehow works.
Monaco keeps the show tied to French language and Riviera culture while giving the final season a sharper, more extravagant edge. It’s a very different energy from the beach scenes in Greece, which is exactly what makes the combination fun.
Even with Greece and Monaco joining the itinerary, Paris isn’t being left behind. Darren Star confirmed that “we’ll be in Paris a lot this season,” and the production is returning to neighborhoods like Montmartre, where the cobblestone streets, cafés, and Sacré-Cœur views give the series some of its most classic scenery.
The show is also expected back around Place de l’Estrapade in the Latin Quarter, where Emily’s apartment building and Gabriel’s restaurant are located, along with stretches of the Seine and the high-end showrooms around Place des Vosges.
That balance matters. The final season may be bigger, sunnier, and more Mediterranean, but Paris is still where the whole story began. It would feel strange to say goodbye to Emily without one more round of dramatic sidewalk conversations, café tables, and impossible outfits on uneven stone streets.
Image courtesy of Netflix
Emily in Paris has always been part romantic comedy, part travel fantasy. Even when viewers roll their eyes at the plot, the locations do a lot of heavy lifting. The show makes places look instantly bookable, which is why its filming locations tend to become travel talking points almost immediately.
That trend is often called set-jetting, and Season 6 is a textbook case. The Mykonos shoot has already generated search interest for Agios Sostis beach and the Kato Mili windmills, and tourism boards in Greece and Monaco are watching closely.
Season 6 gives fans a ready-made itinerary: Paris for the classics, Mykonos for the beach-club glow, and Monaco for the Riviera fantasy. If previous seasons helped boost interest in Saint-Tropez and Rome, the finale could easily do the same for Greek island beaches, Monaco harbor views, and the Parisian neighborhoods fans already know by heart.
Image courtesy of Netflix
The sun is setting on Emily Cooper’s European adventure, but the final season seems determined to go out somewhere beautiful. Moving from Paris to Mykonos and Monaco gives the show one last chance to lean fully into what it does best: style, scenery, romantic chaos, and a travel fantasy that makes you wonder whether you should be packing a suitcase.
Paris may always be the heart of Emily in Paris, but Greece and Monaco are giving the finale a much bigger canvas. If this is really goodbye, at least Emily is saying it with turquoise water, Riviera glamour, and a very good view.
Yes. Season 6 kicked off filming in Greece on May 18, 2026, with Lily Collins and Lucas Bravo spotted shooting scenes at Agios Sostis beach in Mykonos. The island shoot ran through May 26 before production continued on to Monaco and Paris.
The main Greek filming location is Mykonos, one of the Cyclades islands. Confirmed spots include Agios Sostis beach, the Kato Mili windmills, Little Venice, Matogianni Street, and the alleys of Chora town.
Production began in May 2026 and is scheduled to run through September 30, 2026, giving the show a full summer window across Greece, Monaco, and Paris.
No. Creator Darren Star confirmed that Paris remains central to the final season. Season 6 expands to Greece and Monaco, but the French capital is still where the story lives.
Monaco filming is expected around Monte Carlo’s casino district, yacht harbors, and the luxury waterfront areas that define the city-state’s Riviera image. Specific scenes have not been confirmed yet, as production there is scheduled for later in the shoot.
The Greece plot follows directly from the Season 5 finale.
Yes, most of the locations in Paris, Mykonos, and Monaco are publicly accessible. Active filming may temporarily close certain streets, beaches, or venues, but the neighborhoods and landmarks are generally open to visitors.