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Season 6.
The revival cast graduates to Bravo's linear schedule without losing the Peacock audience it built — a hybrid model the show keeps running.
A rhythm worth tracking.
Season six moves RHOM back onto Bravo's linear schedule for the first time since the Peacock revival began, airing there with Peacock carrying the season day-and-date. The core cast from the previous two seasons returns largely unchanged, and original-era housewife Ana Quincoces reappears in a guest capacity. Twenty episodes settle the dual-network model the show keeps running with today.
The #04 slot.
Slot #04 of 7 in the Real Housewives of Miami Editor's Canon. Season six is the revival era's structural turning point. After two seasons exclusively on Peacock, RHOM returns to Bravo's linear schedule while keeping Peacock as a same-day streaming outlet — a hybrid distribution model the franchise hadn't tried before and has kept running since. The cast carries over largely intact from the prior two seasons, which means the social dynamics arrive with real accumulated history instead of starting cold. Ana Quincoces, an original-run housewife, reappears in a guest role, threading the show's two eras together for the first time on screen. Twenty episodes give the format room to run at full length. A confident, structurally important season, ranked just behind the strongest ensemble years.