Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 15 Premiere Hits a Series Low in Ratings

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Reality TV fans are used to The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills making headlines for explosive dinners and friendship-ending drama. This time, though, the big story isn’t about who said what in a sprinter van. It’s about who actually tuned in to watch.

Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 15 Premiere Hits a Series Low in Ratings
Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 15 Premiere Hits a Series Low in Ratings 8

Season 15 of RHOBH premiered last week, and instead of roaring back as Bravo’s crown jewel, it quietly stumbled in the numbers. The episode pulled in around 600,000 live viewers, according to ratings tracker account @RatingsBravo, making it the lowest-rated episode in the show’s history in terms of live viewership.

Instead of kicking things off with a glamorous cast trip or a flashy new Housewife, the premiere focused on fallout.

The main storyline centered on the women reacting to Garcelle Beauvais’ sudden exit from the group. Her departure wasn’t some big on-camera blowup, either. It stemmed from her friendship with Sutton Stracke crumbling behind the scenes, which meant viewers were mostly watching the cast process something that had already happened off-camera.

Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 15 Premiere Hits a Series Low in Ratings
Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 15 Premiere Hits a Series Low in Ratings 9

That choice set a quieter, more introspective tone than the usual premiere episode energy. For a lot of fans, premieres are supposed to hook you in with chaos, tension, or at least some over-the-top wealth porn. Instead, we got conversations about a friendship that fell apart outside the audience’s view.

Is that more realistic? Maybe. Is it appointment TV for casual viewers? That’s a harder sell.


The Streaming Factor (And Why These Numbers Still Matter)

To be fair, live ratings don’t tell the whole story anymore. Bravo, like every other network, now leans heavily on:

  • Next-day streaming
  • On-demand viewing
  • Peacock numbers

Plenty of fans don’t watch live at 8 p.m. Eastern on a Thursday. They catch up over the weekend or binge later in the season. So a low same-day number doesn’t automatically mean no one is watching.

But hitting a franchise-low live rating still raises questions:

  • Are people burned out on this cast?
  • Did the Garcelle exit storyline fail to generate buzz?
  • Or are fans just waiting for word that the season gets good before they commit?

Even in the streaming era, live ratings are a decent temperature check of excitement. And right now, the temperature in Beverly Hills looks cooler than expected.

There was a time when RHOBH felt like the undeniable MVP of the Real Housewives universe: huge drama, huge personalities, huge cultural moments. Now, it’s competing with an entire slate of Bravo hits and spin-offs, plus a crowded reality TV landscape across platforms.

If the premiere is any indication, the season is leaning into emotional fallout and fractured friendships. The question is whether that will build into the kind of must-watch tension that gets people talking again.