Find where Netflix filmed ‘The Four Seasons’ season 2
Viewers hunting for the exact places behind Netflix’s latest season of The Four Seasons have an official roadmap. The show’s production notes map every block of episodes to real towns and properties, giving fans both travel intel and a clear sense of how the story moves from the Catskills to the Jersey Shore and finally across the Atlantic.
Official episode map
Netflix Tudum released a location breakdown the same week Season 2 premiered. Episodes 1 and 2 unfold in upstate New York, Episodes 3 and 4 shift to the Jersey Shore, Episodes 5 and 6 return to the Putnam County lake house introduced last season, and the final two chapters land in Trento, Italy. The list is short, specific, and already circulating on fan accounts.
That tidy schedule matters because the season drops the entire eight-episode run at once. Travel bloggers and weekend planners are using the Tudum post as a ready-made itinerary instead of piecing together set photos on social media.
Production sources say the condensed shoot window forced crews to lock locations early, which explains why every site listed by Tudum has already been confirmed by local tourism boards and local press.
Catskills motel exterior
The grieving friends check into the Midnight Ramble Motel in the first two episodes. The exterior belongs to the Blue Fox Motel in Narrowsburg, Sullivan County, New York, a working property that still rents rooms to travelers driving Route 97 along the Delaware River.
Showrunners chose the site for its vintage neon sign and the overlook trail used in the ash-scattering scene. Narrowsburg’s single main street also doubled as the fictional town center, so fans can walk the same stretch in under ten minutes.
Local business owners report a spike in reservation requests since the premiere, with several guests asking specifically for the room number visible in the establishing shot.
Jersey Shore beach week
Episodes 3 and 4 move the group to Point Pleasant Beach. Crews based themselves in neighboring Ocean Grove, using its preserved Victorian boardwalk houses and the fishing pier for wide establishing shots.
Tina Fey told interviewers that Colman Domingo’s Philadelphia roots made the Jersey Shore the natural choice for his character’s preferred summer spot. The production kept the schedule light, filming early mornings before day-trippers arrived.
Instagram geotags for both towns have climbed steadily since release, with visitors posting side-by-side comparisons of the show frame and the current view from the same bench.
Putnam County lake house
After the shore getaway, the story returns to Nick and Anne’s lake house in Putnam County for Episodes 5 and 6. The property appeared in Season 1, so returning viewers immediately recognize the dock and boathouse.
Additional scenes were shot at Vassar College in nearby Poughkeepsie for flashbacks involving the group’s college years. The campus permitted limited access during summer break, keeping student traffic minimal.
Because the lake house is a private residence, production left the surrounding roads open; several locals posted videos of equipment trucks rolling past on quiet weekday mornings.
Trento Italy finale
The season closes in Trento, Claude’s hometown. Crews filmed in the historic center and at a Christmas market set up weeks early for the production’s convenience.
Additional alpine footage was captured in the nearby Dolomites, giving the final episodes their postcard backdrops. A large La Befana sculpture built in Rome was trucked north for one key sequence, a detail the production designer shared in a Galerie Magazine interview.
Italian tourism offices have already listed the locations on regional travel sites, noting that the market square scenes are walkable from Trento’s main train station.
Production design choices
Sharon Lomofsky, the production designer, pushed for larger set pieces once the Italy block was confirmed. She told interviewers that the scale of the La Befana head kept growing until it required its own flatbed truck for transport.
That attention to oversized practical elements carried over to the U.S. shoots, where motel signage and pier railings were rebuilt rather than relying on digital augmentation.
The choice keeps the season grounded in recognizable places even when the story leans into broad comedy, a balance the creative team says helped maintain continuity with Season 1.
Travel interest spikes
Airline booking data for the week after release shows increased searches for flights into Stewart and Newark airports, the gateways closest to the Catskills and Jersey Shore segments. Travel sites are already packaging weekend itineraries that mirror the episode order.
Trento’s tourism board launched an English-language landing page highlighting filming dates and market hours. Hotel occupancy in the city center rose noticeably during the first ten days of streaming.
Local chambers of commerce report that fans are arriving with printed Tudum maps in hand, treating the trip like a self-guided location tour rather than a standard vacation.
Online fan mapping
Within hours of release, viewers began cross-referencing establishing shots with Google Street View. One widely shared thread matched the Blue Fox Motel sign angle for angle, confirming the Narrowsburg location before any official statement.
Ocean Grove residents posted drone footage of the pier at sunrise, noting that the show’s morning scenes captured the same empty stretch they see on daily walks.
The rapid documentation has turned the season into an unofficial travel resource, with some fans already planning group trips timed to coincide with the same holiday market window used in the finale.
Next season outlook
With every major location now public, future seasons face higher expectations for fresh destinations. Cast members have hinted at possible West Coast or international arcs, though no announcements have been made.
Production sources say the success of the current mapped itinerary may encourage similar Tudum releases for upcoming seasons, giving viewers the same practical information that drove this round of interest.
For now, the four stops—Narrowsburg, Ocean Grove, Putnam County, and Trento—remain the clearest path for anyone wanting to stand in the exact spots where The Four Seasons' season 2 was filmed.
Where viewers can go next
The documented locations give fans a concise, four-stop circuit that matches the season’s narrative arc and can be completed over a long weekend or stretched into a full week abroad. Checking local event calendars before travel keeps the experience aligned with what appeared on screen.

