Where Netflix’s ‘Oasis’ Was Actually Filmed and Why Tenerife Was the Only Choice

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Netflix’s newest Spanish-language obsession has officially arrived, and viewers are already doing what they always do with a good luxury thriller: ignoring the plot just long enough to wonder where on earth those stunning vistas were captured. ‘Oasis’ dropped globally on June 19, and the show’s sun-drenched, high-tension atmosphere has been generating serious buzz across social media and entertainment circles alike.

The series follows a seemingly idyllic luxury resort where wealthy families spend the summer in total exclusivity, but when the police arrive to investigate a mysterious disappearance, paradise quickly fractures. What makes ‘Oasis’ so visually arresting, though, is the real island behind the fiction, and it turns out the production team had very deliberate reasons for landing there.

The Tenerife Filming Locations That Define the Show

Filming for ‘Oasis’ took place in Tenerife, a small island off the west coast of Morocco and the largest of Spain’s Canary Islands. The entire series was shot on location there, and the island’s varied terrain gave the production an almost unfair visual advantage from the very first frame.

One of the most prominent filming locations was Santa Cruz de Tenerife, the island’s capital, where elegant architecture, bustling plazas, and oceanfront scenery combine to create a setting that feels luxurious without trying too hard. Several key scenes were filmed around Plaza de la Candelaria, where the historic Real Casino de Tenerife added a touch of old-world prestige.

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The production also spent considerable time in San Andrés, a charming coastal village whose narrow streets, colorful facades, and traditional Canary Island character helped ground the story whenever the narrative moved away from the polished resort environment. That contrast between the gleaming fictional resort and the authenticity of San Andrés gives ‘Oasis’ a textural richness that purely studio-bound productions simply cannot replicate.

The location shoot in Tenerife delivers splendid 4K sights of labyrinthine resort facilities, chasing fish underwater, and scenes aboard yachts. For a show built on the tension between beauty and danger, the island’s cinematographic range proved invaluable.

Why Choosing the Canary Islands Was No Accident

The decision to film in Tenerife was not simply a matter of availability or convenience. According to executive producer Gema R. Neira, it was a creative cornerstone from the very start of preproduction.

In an exclusive interview with What’s on Netflix, Neira explained that the resort and its location were two of the most important things for the identity of the series, both to represent the luxury it promises and to play off the isolation of that supposedly idyllic place for the thriller story, noting that the team considered many different locations in Spain before ultimately choosing Tenerife for its spectacular scenery, many months of good weather, and that specific mix of resort, beach, and sea the story required.

A Canary Islands location services company called Locationow played a key supporting role by providing expert local knowledge, leading scouting efforts across the island, identifying and proposing suitable filming locations, and ensuring that each setting contributed meaningfully to the narrative. Their involvement helped the production move efficiently across a complex, multi-location shoot without sacrificing creative standards.

Tenerife gave the series a particular Atlantic glare described as a high white sky, a sea the color of cut glass, and low buildings that sink into the volcanic rock so completely they look less constructed than excavated. That quality of light and landscape is essentially impossible to replicate on a soundstage, which is precisely why the producers pursued it so decisively.

The Bambú Producciones Netflix Partnership Behind ‘Oasis’

‘Oasis’ comes from Bambú Producciones, the studio that has spent more than a decade refining one specific creative formula: locking a set of people inside a beautiful place and letting pressure do the rest. That track record matters enormously when assessing what ‘Oasis’ is attempting.

Bambú Producciones is the company behind acclaimed titles such as ‘Cable Girls’, ‘The Asunta Case’, ‘Gran Hotel’, and ‘High Seas’. The studio has become one of Netflix’s most reliable Spanish-language partners, and ‘Oasis’ represents their latest bid to capture the kind of international audience that made ‘Élite’ a global phenomenon.

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Producer Ramón Campos, who created the series alongside Jon de la Cuesta Olaizola, Javier Chacártegui Horrach, David Orea Arribas, and Ricardo Jornet Gallego, described his personal motivation for the project, saying he told the Netflix team that he wanted to make a series for his daughters, who are 14, with a story that speaks about what they are living through right now, including friendship, secrets, doubts, and those first decisions that begin to define you, adding that the mystery is just a vehicle.

Producers have described the series as a coming-of-age mystery where friendship, first loves, difficult choices, and hidden truths drive the narrative as much as the central investigation. That dual layer of personal drama and genre thriller is very much the Bambú signature, and Tenerife gives it the visual weight it needs to land.

Inside the Spanish Resort Thriller That Everyone Is Comparing to ‘Élite’

The series stars Ana Garcés, Tomy Aguilera, and Victoria Kantch, with ‘Oasis’ running eight episodes at TV-MA classification. The ensemble has already drawn attention for its chemistry and the way the show balances its ensemble dynamics against a tightly wound central mystery.

Dani, played by Tomy Aguilera, attends the resort for the first time alongside his mother, who recently remarried, and his step-sister Sofia, played by Ada Molina, a scheming figure who pursues her own adventures throughout the show. Ana Garcés, better known for her lead role in the daily series ‘La Promesa’, plays Helena, a character that takes her in a completely different direction from her previous work with Bambú.

Many viewers are already comparing ‘Oasis’ to ‘Élite’ and ‘The White Lotus’ because it blends wealthy characters, hidden secrets, interpersonal drama, and a central mystery in ways that feel immediately familiar to fans of prestige resort television. Whether it fully delivers on those comparisons remains the central debate among early reviewers and audiences working through the eight-episode run.

As anticipation built ahead of the premiere, many viewers wondered whether ‘Oasis’ could become Netflix’s next breakout international thriller, with the ingredients certainly appearing to be there. Now that the show is live and Tenerife’s coastal beauty is being streamed in living rooms across the world, the real question is whether you think the island itself is the best character in the entire series, so head to the comments and make your case.

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