In Season 7 of 90 Day Fiancé: The Other Way, viewers see Americans leave their comfort zones for less familiar cultural landscapes, such as a remote Tasmanian town or a tranquil English village. When the six couples in the season, two returning favorites and four new couples, move abroad for love, they experience severe cultural shock.
The season premieres on TLC on September 8. They include Greta and Matthew's attempt to share a home in rural England; Pattiya and Dylan's negotiation of a 20-year age difference and social expectations in Tasmania; and Jenny and Sumit, a returning couple who have lived independently for seven years, acclimate to patriarchal family customs in India. Every plot point challenges viewers to consider the profound ways in which location influences trust, behavior, and compromise.
The Other Way demonstrates how culture shock is about closeness, identity, and invisible boundaries rather than just strange habits. These American couples must determine whether love can endure confusion and whether the move was worthwhile in the first place when their new houses conflict with their old expectations.
Culture shock across four continents on 90 Day Fiancé: The Other Way
Americans are thrust into radically different cultures in 90 Day Fiancé: The Other Way Season 7, including the social customs of France, the secluded social scene of Tasmania, the joint-family structure of India, and the provincial traditions of England.
Emotional turmoil, communication failures, and an unexpected submission to rituals they do not comprehend or anticipate are the results of the confrontation between American principles and established cultural norms in each scenario.
Rural England & isolated Tasmania — Small town surprises
Greta from Oklahoma and Matthew from England fell in love through a vegan dating app, connecting over their shared love of cats and quirky lifestyles. However, nothing prepared Greta for the strict social standards and nonverbal expectations of rural England. She has to learn whether to sit silently or speak up, or otherwise she runs the risk of upsetting Matthew's parents and neighbors.
To be with Dylan, Pattiya relocates to Tasmania, but she is shocked by the isolated location and traditional outlook there. Meeting people and shopping are examples of routines that can become emotional obstacles, highlighting how small-town ideals can seem more alien than big-city ones.
Returning couples — India, intimacy & living with in-laws
After almost ten years of living independently, Jenny Slatten and Sumit Singh return in Season 7, only to encounter the most profound cultural disruption to date: moving back to Sumit's family home. Jenny acknowledges,
"I want my independent life back," 90 Day Fiancé: The Other Way star said characterizing her mother-in-law, who is close to her age, as dominating and uncomfortable.
Jenny's culture shock is caused by adjusting to joint-family norms, less personal space, and less autonomy. She also lost the partner-driven dynamic she had been accustomed to for years.
Broader patterns — Culture clash across the franchise
Season 7 is not the only instance of culture shock in the 90 Day Fiancé series. From Nicole's uneasiness with modesty in Egypt to Kimberly's critique of gender norms in India, viewers frequently witness American partners clashing with tradition.
Both critics and admirers point out that Americans frequently want their culture to rule rather than change. This tradition is carried on in 90 Day Fiancé: The Other Way Season 7, but this time the Americans are battling to fit into lives that used to fit them.
Watch 90 Day Fiancé: The Other Way Season 7 on TLC.