Where Did ‘Euphoria’ Take Place? Here Are All the Real-Life Locations of Season 3
Some shows flirt with aesthetics. Euphoria practically marries them, throws a neon-lit reception, and then ghosts reality for dramatic effect. With Zendaya leading the emotional Olympics, Season 3 upgrades its visual chaos into a globe-trotting fever dream. What once felt like suburban angst now stretches into something suspiciously international, as if the characters unlocked a premium travel tier along with their unresolved trauma.
While the emotions spiral inward with philosophical intensity, the locations expand outward with cinematic audacity, setting the stage for a season where geography becomes storytelling’s loudest character.
Warner Bros. Studio becomes Euphoria’s manufactured reality
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At Warner Bros. Studio, reality politely exits stage left. This is where pristine chaos gets engineered, where Maddy’s glossy career spaces and Lexi’s theatrical ambitions are not lived in but constructed like emotional exhibits. The iconic water tower looms in the background like a silent producer credit. From Casablanca to A Star Is Born, history lingers, now repurposed for Gen Z existential crises.
While the sets fabricate control and polish, the narrative slips into grittier terrains, where perfection fades, and survival instincts take center stage.
Huntington Park plays dress-up as danger zone
Huntington Park pulls off a cinematic identity crisis, doubling as Mexican border towns where Rue’s storyline trades suburban sadness for high-stakes risk. Streets that usually hum with commerce now echo with tension, as if every corner whispers bad decisions. With Zendaya spotted filming here, the location becomes less about geography and more about moral freefall dressed as ambition.
As familiar streets disguise themselves as danger zones, the story begins questioning whether identity itself is just another performance.
Los Angeles refuses to be just a backdrop
Los Angeles does not sit quietly in the background. It broods. From empty parking lots to palm trees that look suspiciously judgmental, the city mirrors every emotional breakdown with aesthetic precision. Once the heart of teenage chaos, it now evolves into a stage for adult consequences. The skyline glows like opportunity while quietly hosting regret.
While the city reflects internal turmoil with eerie accuracy, the past refuses to stay buried, dragging the narrative back to where everything began.
Grant High School keeps haunting the present
Ulysses S. Grant High School returns like an unwanted memory that refuses to lose relevance. Flashbacks filmed here stitch together timelines, proving that graduation did not come with emotional closure. Hallways once filled with teenage chaos now feel like philosophical traps, asking whether anyone ever truly leaves their past behind.
As nostalgia creeps in with uncomfortable persistence, the story pivots toward landscapes that strip everything down to raw survival.
Antelope Valley turns isolation into aesthetic poetry
Antelope Valley offers vast emptiness that feels almost judgmental. Rue’s long-haul journeys unfold here, alongside a bizarrely constructed strip club set that feels like a metaphor pretending not to be one. The desert does not comfort; it exposes. Every frame feels like a philosophical question about choices, consequences, and the illusion of escape.
While the desert amplifies solitude, the narrative suddenly leaps continents, trading isolation for cultural dissonance.
New York City gives Jules a reinvention fantasy
New York City becomes Jules’ canvas, where art and identity blur into something almost aspirational. Gallery spaces replace classrooms, and ambition replaces confusion, though not entirely successfully. The city pulses with opportunity while quietly demanding reinvention at a cost.
As reinvention begins to feel like performance, the story zooms further into hyper-specific urban textures that redefine individuality.
Queens grounds the glamour with grit
Queens strips away Manhattan’s polished fantasy and replaces it with something more honest. Jules’ journey here feels less curated and more real, where ambition collides with everyday survival. The borough becomes a reminder that growth rarely looks cinematic up close.
While urban realism settles in, the narrative abruptly crosses oceans, embracing locations that feel both historic and haunting.
Dublin adds drama with a side of history
Dublin enters with moody gravitas. Scenes at Kilmainham Jail and The Long Hall inject the storyline with weight, especially around Cal Jacobs. The city feels like it remembers everything, which is unsettling when characters are trying very hard to forget.
As history presses heavily on the narrative, the visuals pivot toward futuristic spectacle that feels almost unreal.
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Vatican City turns symbolism into spectacle
Rumors swirled that Vatican City could be one of the filming locations for season 3, though official production records have not confirmed it. The speculation first appeared through early IMDb Pro listings and online discussions that also pointed toward Singapore and Dublin. With episode drops still unfolding, confirmation remains dependent on later releases gradually revealing the full filming map.
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What are your thoughts on Euphoria turning its locations into emotional metaphors and cinematic statements, and which setting defined season 3 for you the most? Let us know in the comments.
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Edited By: Aliza Siddiqui
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