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| Where Was Euphoria Season 3 Filmed? Inside the Global Locations Behind HBO’s Most Restless Teen Drama Yet. (Credits: HBO) |
HBO’s Euphoria Season 3 (2026) doesn’t just move its characters forward — it blows their world wide open. With a five-year time jump and storylines scattered across continents, the series swaps its tight suburban lens for a globe-spanning backdrop.
The result is a visually restless season that mirrors the characters’ fractured lives, even if the production team kept many exact spots deliberately under wraps to avoid disruption during filming.
That secrecy hasn’t stopped fans from piecing things together. What’s clear is this: Season 3 was shot across the United States, Europe, and Asia, with California — especially Los Angeles County — acting as the production anchor.
Beyond that, the show leans into real-world locations to ground its more chaotic arcs, blending polished studio work with raw, lived-in environments that feel almost too real at times.
At the centre of it all sits Los Angeles County, California, where most of the heavy lifting happened. The production made full use of Warner Bros.
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| HBO |
Studios in Burbank, a sprawling lot packed with sound stages and adaptable backlot streets.
It’s where many of the controlled, interior-heavy scenes were crafted — the kind that require perfect lighting, precise chaos, and just enough polish to look messy.
Outside the studio bubble, filming spilled into Huntington Park, where entire streets were reworked to double as Mexico for Rue’s storyline, a detail that says a lot about the show’s commitment to visual continuity.
Meanwhile, Van Nuys hosted Rue’s now-notorious smoke shack scenes, filmed at a real storefront that suddenly found itself part of TV lore.
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| HBO |
Over in Lincoln Heights, a functioning church became the backdrop for some of the season’s more reflective moments, while Pearblossom saw the construction of the fictional Silver Slipper set — a reminder that even in a “real” world, Euphoria still builds its own.
Move east, and New York City steps in to represent Jules’ chapter.
The show reportedly shot across multiple neighbourhoods, with Queens offering a grounded, everyday feel that contrasts sharply with Manhattan’s usual gloss.
There are also whispers of scenes tied to Rikers Island, adding a harder, more unsettling edge to the narrative.
It’s a shift in tone that fits Jules’ uncertain path — less dreamy, more exposed.
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Across the river, New Jersey quietly becomes a key player. In Edison, a local hardware store was used to stage everyday interactions that feel almost too mundane for a show known for excess — and that’s exactly the point.
Hackettstown, with its livestock auction setting, introduces a rural texture rarely seen in earlier seasons, giving the story an unexpected detour into quieter, more stripped-back spaces.
Then there’s Jersey City, effectively acting as a stand-in for New York without the logistical chaos, offering dense streets and residential blocks that keep the urban energy intact while staying production-friendly.
For viewers, it’s seamless. For the crew, it’s survival.
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The series doesn’t stop at the US. London enters the frame with both city shoots and controlled work at Warner Bros. Studios Leavesden, a facility known for its scale and versatility.
It adds a slightly colder, more structured visual tone — fitting for storylines that lean into ambition and reinvention.
From there, the production stretches further into Europe, with Rome bringing in classic architectural weight, while Dublin contributes two sharply contrasting locations: the atmospheric Long Hall pub and the stark, historical Kilmainham Gaol.
It’s a mix that feels intentional — warmth and confinement, freedom and consequence.
Then comes Singapore, arguably the most visually striking addition. With reported filming around Marina Bay Sands, Gardens by the Bay, and the Singapore Flyer, the show leans into ultra-modern skylines and polished cityscapes.
It’s a world away from East Highland, and that’s precisely the point — these characters are no longer who they were, and the locations make sure you feel it.
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| HBO |
Interestingly, one additional and thematically aligned location that fits the show’s expanding scope is San Diego, California.
Its coastal highways, border-adjacent atmosphere, and cinematic urban sprawl make it a logical extension of the Mexico-adjacent storyline.
It’s the kind of place that sits between worlds — much like the characters themselves — and wouldn’t feel out of place in future episodes or unseen cuts.
Fan reactions, unsurprisingly, are all over the place. Some viewers are loving the global scale, calling it a natural evolution for a show that’s always pushed boundaries.
Others, though, reckon the scattered locations make the story feel less intimate — “too glossy, not enough grit” as one common take goes.
There’s also been a wave of curiosity around the deliberately hidden filming spots, with fans half-joking that the secrecy only makes them more determined to track them down. In short, the locations are doing exactly what Euphoria does best: sparking debate.
What’s undeniable is that Season 3’s filming choices aren’t just aesthetic — they’re narrative tools. Each city, each street, each oddly specific corner shop feeds into the characters’ emotional state. It’s less about where they are, and more about how far they’ve drifted.
So, if you’ve been eyeing a trip inspired by Euphoria, you’re not alone — just don’t expect a neat map with every pin dropped. Some places are open, some are guesswork, and some are intentionally blurred. But that’s part of the appeal.
Now the real question is: which of these locations would you actually visit — the polished skyline, the chaotic backstreet, or somewhere in between?





