Love Island Vote: Lucinda and Sean Top Betting Odds as Finale Nears and All Stars Future Is Questioned
The public love island vote landscape has shifted dramatically in the run-up to the All Stars final, with Lucinda and Sean installed as the bookmakers' current favourites to take the £50, 000 prize. The outcome matters now because there are only seven couples left in the villa and the series' future has been publicly questioned by a prominent former contestant.
Seven couples left in the villa
Contestants remaining at the late stage of the series number seven: Belle and Harrison, Samie and Ciaran, Tommy and Jessy, Scott and Leanne, Sean and Lucinda, Zac and Millie, and Yamen and Whitney. That group will be whittled down to a typical five-couple finale, and the competition still turns on public participation in the final vote for the winning couple and the £50, 000 prize.
Love Island Vote shows Lucinda and Sean as favourites
Bookmakers have placed Lucinda and Sean at odds of 6/4, making them the current frontrunners. Millie and Zac sit close behind at 13/8, while Samie and Ciaran are listed at 9/2. The public recently voted Lucinda and Sean the 'favourite couple', and Sean has formally asked Lucinda to be his girlfriend, a development that has been presented as making their partnership official.
Feuds, Villa USA and the fallout around Lucinda
Lucinda's rise to favourite has not been without controversy. She has faced public backlash and friction with fellow Islanders, most notably a tense feud with Belle. That feud escalated after Lucinda formed a connection with Sean while Belle was away in Villa USA. The situation intensified when Belle later bonded with Scott, who was coupled with Leanne, and Lucinda publicly labelled Belle a 'hypocrite'. Producers and viewers have watched the dynamics shift back toward a more stable pairing for Lucinda and Sean in recent weeks.
How the odds map to possible eliminations
History on the show generally yields five couples in the live finale. Using the current betting market as a guide, Harrison and Belle and Tommy and Jessy are the most vulnerable and are likely to be among the next departures if the public has the chance to vote in those rounds. Those projections flow directly from the odds listing and the established final format, making the immediate fate of several Islanders measurable by bookmakers' pricing.
Finale timing and Maya Jama's role
The material contains two different finale timings: one listing the grand finale as taking place live on Monday 23 February at 9pm on ITV2 with Maya Jama set to crown the winning couple, and another placing the final on Monday evening, February 20, when Maya Jama will announce the winners. The exact date is unclear in the provided context. The broadcast is noted to air on ITV2 and on the streaming platform ITVX.
Casey O'Gorman says All Stars future is in doubt
Former contestant Casey O'Gorman has signalled scepticism about the longevity of Love Island: All Stars. A winner of an earlier All Stars series, Casey said he thinks the current series will be the last and has ruled out returning to the franchise for a fifth appearance. He cited a shift in casting that included bringing American participants and suggested that many earlier All Stars contenders who declined to take part when younger are unlikely to come back now that they are older. Casey made these remarks while speaking on behalf of Free Bets.
Casey’s own Love Island track record is detailed: he first appeared on the ninth series in 2023, returned for All Stars series one in 2024 and All Stars series two in 2025, and also took part in Love Island Games in 2025. He won the second All Stars series with Gabby Allen, though the partnership ended weeks after leaving the villa in South Africa. On Love Island Games, he described the format as heavily challenge-based, saying the cast spent seven to eight hours a day on challenges that limited time for forming relationships and made the experience different and less enjoyable.
What makes this notable is the contrast between a pair that has attracted both public votes and sustained criticism, and a former winner openly questioning whether the franchise can sustain another All Stars run—both elements that could shape audience appetite and casting decisions if the show continues.