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Tyler Perry’s Divorced Sistas Sets Return Date on Paramount+

Five women in elegant green dresses pose confidently against a turquoise background. Text reads "Paramount+ Original, Tyler Perry's Divorced Sistas, New Episodes Streaming April 15."

The break is over, and apparently, so is the calm. Tyler Perry’s Divorced Sistas is back on April 15 with the second half of its debut season, and if the first batch of episodes laid the groundwork, the next eight are ready to light the match.


Streaming exclusively on Paramount+, the midseason return kicks off with a two-episode drop before settling into a weekly rollout through May 27. It’s a strategy that suggests confidence and maybe a little bit of restraint because once this group gets going, things tend to spiral quickly.



Created, written, and directed by Tyler Perry, the series follows five women, Rasheda, Geneva, Naomi, Tiffany, and Bridgette as they navigate the emotional minefield of divorce, dating, and everything in between. But the real hook isn’t just romantic drama; it’s the shifting dynamics within the friend group itself. Loyalty is tested, secrets surface, and support systems start to look a little less stable.


And that’s exactly where these new episodes are headed. Long-simmering tensions finally boil over, with fractured relationships and hard truths taking center stage. If the early episodes were about setting up the players, this next stretch is about watching them collide.


The cast, including LeToya Luckett, Khadeen Indréa, Porscha Coleman, Briana Price, and Jennifer Sears, leans into that escalation. Their teases hint at sharper conflicts, deeper emotional arcs, and characters who are starting to question not just their relationships, but themselves.


Naomi, in particular, sounds like she’ll remain a standout, quick-witted, unpredictable, and not exactly known for holding back. Meanwhile, Bridgette is inching toward a long-overdue sense of self, though whether that sticks is another story. Tiffany is opening herself up to love (risky), Rasheda continues to carry everyone else’s burdens (also risky), and Geneva is staring down some uncomfortable truths (you guessed it—risky).


What Divorced Sistas does well is keep its focus tight. It’s less about flashy twists and more about emotional fallout, the kind that builds slowly and hits harder because of it. The dialogue can veer into melodrama, but that’s part of the appeal. These women don’t do subtle, and the show is better for it.


With eight episodes left to close out Season 1, the series is clearly aiming to leave a mark and maybe a few broken friendships, in its wake. For viewers already invested, this is where the real payoff begins. And for anyone on the fence, consider this your cue to catch up before the group chat fully implodes.

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