Seattle Billionaires Books in Order
Part ofOlivia Hayle Books in OrderBrowse the Seattle Billionaires series by Olivia Hayle in order, with short summaries, character links, and clear guidance on the best place to start.
Last updated: June 9, 2026
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Publication Order
4 books
Billion Dollar Beast
by Olivia Hayle
2020
Blair takes a consulting job with Nicholas Park, her brother's best friend and the man who has always pushed her away. Their office battles are sharp, but the heat underneath them is even sharper.
Billion Dollar Catch
by Olivia Hayle
2020
Bella plans a quiet summer house-sitting gig, until billionaire neighbor Ethan Carter, a newly single dad, catches her at a very awkward moment. What starts as a summer flirtation soon asks more of them both.
Billion Dollar Enemy
by Olivia Hayle
2020
Skye's perfect one-night stand becomes a disaster when she learns the man is trying to tear down her bookstore. By day they're enemies, by night they're making rules they were never going to keep.
Billion Dollar Fiancé
by Olivia Hayle
2021
Madison runs into childhood friend Liam Carter years later and winds up playing his fake fiancée. The plan will help his image and sting her cheating ex, but pretending starts to feel dangerously real.
Series background & context
Seattle Billionaires feels like Olivia Hayle's early blueprint for the kind of romance she does so well: wealthy, complicated men, capable women who do not roll over for them, and a city full of expensive suits, business deals, and emotional blind spots. The books are connected standalones, so each couple gets a full story, but the crossover between characters gives the series a friendly, bingeable rhythm. Read one, and it is very easy to want the next billionaire in line.
Billion Dollar Enemy opens the series with one of Hayle's clearest favorite setups, a one-night stand turning into total disaster. Skye learns that the man she slept with is also the developer threatening her bookstore, and that mix of attraction and real-world conflict gives the series a strong start. It sets up something Seattle Billionaires returns to often: the hero may have money and power, but the heroine has something just as important, a life and a line she is not willing to give up.
The next two books keep the pressure high while changing the emotional flavor. Billion Dollar Beast leans into brother's-best-friend tension when Blair takes a job with Nicholas Park, who has spent years trying to keep her at arm's length. Billion Dollar Catch slows the pace just enough for a summer romance with Bella and single dad tech legend Ethan Carter, mixing neighborly attraction, family life, and the question of whether a short-term escape can become something lasting.
Then Billion Dollar Fiancé closes the main run with Madison and Liam, childhood connection, fake engagement, and plenty of unresolved history. It is a nice example of what the whole series does well. The setup is fun and glossy on the surface, but the real pull comes from memory, vulnerability, and the way old feelings refuse to stay buried once the characters are back in each other's space.
The money is big, but the series never loses sight of ordinary lives.
That is a big part of the charm. One heroine is trying to save a bookstore. Another is proving she belongs in a high-pressure job. Another is figuring out what she wants from a summer that keeps getting more serious. Even when the heroes are tech stars or men who can casually buy whole futures, the books stay focused on personal stakes. Seattle itself helps with that mix. In these novels, it feels modern and polished, but not so polished that the characters stop feeling human.
If you want contemporary billionaire romance that moves fast, delivers strong chemistry early, and still leaves room for tenderness, Seattle Billionaires is an easy recommendation. The books are lighter than Hayle's later family-dynasty stories, but they already show her knack for pairing sharp conflict with emotionally satisfying payoff. It is a very readable series, and a very solid place to start if you want to see how her connected worlds work.
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