Beth Reekles Books in Order (Updated: February 27, 2026)

Beth Reekles writes romantic fiction across two main lanes: YA romance (including her best-known series, The Kissing Booth) and adult romcom (starting with Love, Locked Down). Most of her books are standalones, but a couple of lines are best read in sequence for character continuity.

Beth Reekles Books in Order (Updated: February 27, 2026)

A note that saves real confusion: the YA and adult catalogs interleave by year, so “publication order” only helps if you want to watch her writing evolve. If you’re reading for story continuity, follow the series groupings below instead.

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The fastest way to choose your first book

If you want the core Beth Reekles experience (and the only major must-read-in-order series):
Start The Kissing Booth at Book 1.

If you want current YA (fandom/romcom energy) with a clear two-book arc:
Start Do You Ship It at Book 1.

If you want adult romcom (work, dating, modern mess):
Start with Love, Locked Down.


Continuity rules (plain and strict)

  • Read in order: The Kissing Booth books; Do You Ship It books.
  • Read anytime: everything else on this page (standalones and market-lane switches).
  • Watch for format extras: The Kissing Booth: Road Trip! is a short special; The Beach House is a companion novella that’s been available in different forms.

Series reading orders

The Kissing Booth universe (recommended order)

  1. The Kissing Booth (2012): A school carnival “kissing booth” sparks a rule-breaking romance, forcing Elle to choose between first love and the friendship that defined her life.
  2. The Beach House (2019) [companion novella]: Summer at the beach house shifts the friendship dynamics around Elle and Lee, building extra context without replacing the main trilogy.
  3. The Kissing Booth 2: Going the Distance (2020): Long-distance strain and new attention complicate the relationship, forcing Elle to decide what she wants before graduation makes the choice permanent.
  4. The Kissing Booth: Road Trip! (2020) [short special]: A quick detour story adds a bite-sized episode for fans who want more time with the cast.
  5. The Kissing Booth 3: One Last Time (2021): The final stretch pushes every relationship to a decision point, forcing Elle to pick a future instead of letting everyone else write it.

Also seen in the wild: The Kissing Booth: Noah’s Story is commonly listed as a POV companion, but publication/availability varies by platform and edition, so treat it as optional bonus content rather than required reading.

Do You Ship It (read in order)

  1. Do You Ship It (2025): A fandom-and-cosplay setup turns personal fast, forcing Cerys to confront what she’s projecting onto a crush, and what’s real.
  2. For Real This Time (2026): The sequel builds on the first book’s relationship and identity stakes, forcing the characters to choose what they’ll be “for real” about in public and in private.

Standalone books in publication order

These are written to be read independently, so this list is for readers who like a clean timeline.

  1. Rolling Dice (2013): A high-school outsider gets pulled into a popularity orbit, forcing her to decide what she’ll trade for belonging.
  2. Out of Tune (2014): A new connection reframes an old rhythm, forcing a heroine to choose whether to keep the peace or chase the truth.
  3. Cwtch Me If You Can (2015) [novella-length]: A compact romance pushes two people into closer emotional quarters than planned, forcing honesty before the story runs out of room.
  4. It Won’t Be Christmas Without You (2019): A sisters-at-Christmas setup turns into a relationship reset, forcing a return home to become a real reckoning.
  5. Love, Locked Down (2022) [adult]: One building’s lockdown turns into interconnected romantic chaos, forcing multiple couples to face what they’ve been avoiding.
  6. Sincerely Yours, Anna Sherwood (2023) [YA]: A summer internship throws rivals into reluctant proximity, forcing their assumptions to collapse into something messier.
  7. The Summer Switch-Off (2023) [YA]: A “perfect holiday” becomes a digital-detox trap, forcing three girls to face themselves without the usual distractions.
  8. Faking It (2023) [adult]: A dating deadline and public pressure turn into a fake-relationship scramble, forcing Sophie to ask why she’s performing love instead of living it.
  9. Beach Cute (2024) [YA]: A beach-town situation turns into a coming-of-age pressure test, forcing a heroine to decide who she is when the summer fantasy gets real.
  10. Love & Lattes (2024) [YA]: A near-miss kiss and a new internship collide, forcing a heroine to untangle attraction from ambition before both derail.
  11. The Reunion (2024) [adult]: Enemies-to-lovers tension detonates in close quarters, forcing old history into the open when there’s nowhere to hide.
  12. The Layover (2025) [adult]: Travel disruption traps two people in unwanted proximity, forcing a grudging connection to survive long enough to become a choice.
  13. The Fangirl Project (2025) [YA]: A fandom-driven plan to get closer to a crush backfires into self-discovery, forcing a heroine to choose confidence over performance.

Recommended reading order (the “no-regrets” path)

If you want the cleanest experience with the biggest continuity payoff:

  1. The Kissing Booth (2012)
  2. The Kissing Booth 2: Going the Distance (2020)
  3. The Kissing Booth 3: One Last Time (2021)
  4. Then choose your lane:
    • Do You Ship It (2025) → For Real This Time (2026) for current YA, or
    • Love, Locked Down (2022) for adult romcom, then pick any adult standalone that sounds right (Faking It, The Reunion, The Layover).

Add The Beach House and Road Trip! only if you want extra time with Kissing Booth characters.


Latest release status

Newest confirmed release: For Real This Time (2026).
No later titles are reliably confirmed in the same set of listings used for this update, so treat anything beyond this as unverified until it appears on a major publisher catalog entry.


FAQs

Do I have to read The Kissing Booth in order?
Yes, if you care about character arcs and endgame choices. The trilogy is built as a continuous timeline.

Are the adult books connected to the YA books?
No. They share an author, not a story world, so you can switch lanes anytime.

What if I only want one standalone that feels “most Beth Reekles”?
Start with Rolling Dice (2013) for early YA voice, or Love, Locked Down (2022) for the adult romcom lane.


Conclusion

If you want the safest rule: read the two series in order, and treat everything else as standalone picks by premise. For most readers, the best starting point remains The Kissing Booth (2012), then branch into YA (Do You Ship It) or adult romcom (Love, Locked Down) depending on the tone you want next.

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Frank is the editor of BookSeries.blog, focusing on publication order, chronological timelines, and spoiler-free reading guides for book series and fictional universes.