Love Island winners always become a talking point long after the final text has been sent. The show may be built around flirting, recouplings and villa drama, but the winners tell a bigger story: who the public believed in, which couples had real chemistry, and which islanders managed to turn a few weeks on television into a much longer career.
For some couples, the win became the start of a lasting relationship. For others, life outside the villa moved much faster than fans expected. That is why the full list is still useful: it shows not only who won, but also how each series is remembered now.
Quick Answer: Who Are the Love Island Winners?
The Love Island winners are the couples voted as champions by the public at the end of each UK series. The main summer series began in 2015, with Jess Hayes and Max Morley winning the first revived series. More recent winners include Toni Laites and Cach Mercer in 2025, while Gabby Allen and Casey O’Gorman won Love Island: All Stars 2025.
The winning couple is usually associated with a £50,000 prize, although the real value of winning is often bigger than the cash. Many islanders leave with brand deals, TV opportunities, podcasts, fashion work and a much larger public profile.
Full List of Love Island Winners
Here is a simple year-by-year look at the UK winners, including the winter and All Stars editions where relevant.
| Year | Series | Winning Couple | Current Status / Note |
| 2025 | Series 12 | Toni Laites and Cach Mercer | Latest summer winners |
| 2025 | All Stars Series 2 | Gabby Allen and Casey O’Gorman | Reported to have split after the show |
| 2024 | Series 11 | Mimii Ngulube and Josh Oyinsan | Later split |
| 2024 | All Stars Series 1 | Molly Smith and Tom Clare | Still together in recent reports |
| 2023 | Series 10 | Jess Harding and Sammy Root | Later split |
| 2023 | Series 9 / Winter | Kai Fagan and Sanam Harrinanan | Still together and widely reported as married |
| 2022 | Series 8 | Ekin-Su Culculoglu and Davide Sanclimenti | Later split |
| 2021 | Series 7 | Millie Court and Liam Reardon | Split, then rekindled their relationship |
| 2020 | Series 6 / Winter | Paige Turley and Finn Tapp | Later split |
| 2019 | Series 5 | Amber Gill and Greg O’Shea | Split shortly after the final |
| 2018 | Series 4 | Dani Dyer and Jack Fincham | Later split |
| 2017 | Series 3 | Kem Cetinay and Amber Davies | Later split |
| 2016 | Series 2 | Cara De La Hoyde and Nathan Massey | Married with children |
| 2015 | Series 1 | Jess Hayes and Max Morley | Split after the show |

Love Island Winners by Year
2025: Toni Laites and Cach Mercer
Toni Laites and Cach Mercer became the 2025 summer winners after a series that gave viewers plenty to debate. Their win stood out because their journey was not the most predictable one from the start, but that often helps on Love Island. The public usually responds to momentum, and by the final, Toni and Cach had enough support to take the title.
2025 All Stars: Gabby Allen and Casey O’Gorman
Gabby Allen and Casey O’Gorman won the second All Stars series. Their victory gave the spin-off another headline moment, although the relationship did not last in the long term. All Stars works differently from the main series because many contestants already have history with the show, so the audience watches with a different level of familiarity.
2024: Mimii Ngulube and Josh Oyinsan
Mimii Ngulube and Josh Oyinsan made history as the first Black couple to win the UK series. Their win was warmly received by many viewers, but the relationship later ended. Even so, their victory remains an important moment in the show’s recent history.
2024 All Stars: Molly Smith and Tom Clare
Molly Smith and Tom Clare won the first Love Island: All Stars series. Their win gave the format a strong opening season and proved that returning islanders could still create a fresh storyline for viewers. Unlike many winning couples, they have continued to be discussed as one of the more successful recent pairings.
2023: Jess Harding and Sammy Root
Jess Harding and Sammy Root were one of the more surprising winning couples. Their relationship had its rocky moments in the villa, but Jess built a strong connection with viewers and that helped carry the couple through to the final. Like many Love Island winners, they later split after leaving the villa.
2023 Winter: Kai Fagan and Sanam Harrinanan
Kai Fagan and Sanam Harrinanan are often seen as one of the show’s stronger success stories. Their relationship developed during the winter series, and they have continued to be followed by fans after the final. In a show where many winning couples split quickly, their story is one of the happier exceptions.
2022: Ekin-Su Culculoglu and Davide Sanclimenti
Ekin-Su and Davide were not just winners; they were the centre of one of the most memorable Love Island series. Their relationship had arguments, humour and plenty of big television moments, which made them impossible to ignore. They later split, but their season remains one of the most talked-about in the show’s modern run.
2021: Millie Court and Liam Reardon
Millie Court and Liam Reardon won in 2021 after a journey that had clear highs and lows. Their story continued outside the villa, including a split and later reconciliation. That has kept them in the conversation whenever fans discuss which winning couples had real staying power.
2020: Paige Turley and Finn Tapp
Paige Turley and Finn Tapp won the first winter edition of Love Island. Their relationship felt steady during the series, and they stayed together for several years after the show. They eventually split, but compared with many villa romances, their relationship lasted a significant amount of time.
2019: Amber Gill and Greg O’Shea
Amber Gill and Greg O’Shea were one of the most unexpected winning pairs. Greg entered late, but Amber’s popularity with viewers was already strong. Their win showed that Love Island is not always about the longest relationship in the villa; sometimes it is about who the audience feels most invested in by the final week.
2018: Dani Dyer and Jack Fincham
Dani Dyer and Jack Fincham were clear favourites during much of their series. Their easy chemistry and familiar “day one” storyline made them a safe pick for viewers. The relationship ended after the show, but their win remains one of the most recognisable moments in Love Island history.
2017: Kem Cetinay and Amber Davies
Kem Cetinay and Amber Davies helped push Love Island further into mainstream culture. Their series produced several standout islanders, and Kem in particular became one of the show’s best-known personalities. Although the relationship ended, both winners remained visible after the villa.
2016: Cara De La Hoyde and Nathan Massey
Cara De La Hoyde and Nathan Massey are the classic example fans point to when they ask whether Love Island can actually work. They won in 2016, later married and built a family together. For a show known for quick break-ups, their relationship still gives the winners list a genuine love story.
2015: Jess Hayes and Max Morley
Jess Hayes and Max Morley were the first winners of the revived UK version. Their relationship did not last, but they set the template for everything that followed: public votes, post-villa fame, fast media attention and endless curiosity about what happens after the cameras stop rolling.
Which Love Island Winners Are Still Together?
The honest answer is: not many. Love Island can create strong feelings quickly, but life outside the villa is very different. Couples go from constant filming and shared routines to press attention, brand work, distance, family pressure and real-world schedules. That shift is hard to manage, even for pairs who looked solid on screen.
Cara De La Hoyde and Nathan Massey remain one of the show’s biggest long-term success stories. Kai Fagan and Sanam Harrinanan have also become a more recent example of a winning couple who managed to build something beyond the final. Molly Smith and Tom Clare are another recent pair still linked together in public coverage.
How Much Do Love Island Winners Get?
Love Island winners are usually linked with a £50,000 prize. In earlier series, the show famously played with the idea of whether one person would split or steal the money, but the lasting impact of winning is usually about much more than the prize fund.
A winning couple can leave the villa with instant name recognition. That can lead to paid partnerships, fashion edits, TV bookings, event appearances, podcasts, social campaigns and long-term influencer work. In some cases, the runners-up, or even non-winning islanders, go on to receive more attention than the official winners.
Why Fans Still Search for Love Island Winners
The winners list works almost like a timeline of reality TV. Each couple brings back a different era of the show, from the early villa years to the winter seasons and now the All Stars format. Fans search for more than a list of names. They want to know who lasted, who split, who became famous and who disappeared from the spotlight.
For the official show hub, visit ITV Love Island. For more celebrity and reality TV features, visit FEAST Magazine.
Final Thoughts
Love Island winners are remembered for different reasons. Some won because they had the strongest romance, some because one islander carried huge public support, and some. After all, their story simply landed at the right time. The full list shows that winning the show does not always mean a relationship will last, but it almost always changes the contestants’ lives.
From Jess and Max in 2015 to Toni and Cach in 2025, the winners chart how Love Island has grown from a dating show into a full celebrity pipeline. The villa may only last a few weeks, but for the winning couples, the attention can continue for years.
FAQs
Who won Love Island 2025?
Toni Laites and Cach Mercer won the 2025 summer series of Love Island.
Who won Love Island All Stars 2025?
Gabby Allen and Casey O’Gorman won Love Island: All Stars 2025. They were later reported to have split.
Who were the first Love Island winners?
Jess Hayes and Max Morley won the first revived UK series of Love Island in 2015.
Which Love Island winners are still together?
Cara De La Hoyde and Nathan Massey are the best-known long-term success story from the winners list. Kai Fagan and Sanam Harrinanan are also widely followed as a successful recent couple, while Molly Smith and Tom Clare have remained together in recent reports.
How much do Love Island winners get paid?
The winning couple is usually associated with a £50,000 prize, but the bigger earning potential often comes after the show through brand deals, appearances and media work.
Has Love Island 2026 had a winner yet?
The 2026 series had started at the time of writing, but the winner had not yet been added to the historical winners list. This section should be updated once the final result is confirmed.


