Below is the complete list of Meghan Quinn’s Billionaire Rom Coms books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series.
Billionaire Rom Coms Books in Publication Order
- A Not So Meet Cute (2021)
View Book - So Not Meant to Be (2022)
View Book - Untying the Knot (2022)
View Book - A Long Time Coming (2023)
View Book
About Billionaire Rom Coms
Meghan Quinn’s Billionaire Rom Coms books are built around wealth, chaos, attraction, and a very specific kind of romantic-comedy excess. These novels are glossy and high-energy, but what makes them work is not simply the billionaire fantasy. Quinn uses money, status, and outsized public lives as pressure points, then fills the books with banter, emotional mess, fake arrangements, old grudges, and the kind of interpersonal disasters that make romantic comedy feel both ridiculous and strangely sincere at the same time.
The core of the series is the Cane family, especially the brothers who anchor the first stretch of the line. That family connection gives the books their cohesion. Even when each novel focuses on a different couple, the world feels shared rather than generic. There is a strong sense of social overlap, family interference, running jokes, and characters who continue to matter after their own story is over. That is a big part of the appeal. These are not isolated billionaire romances that happen to sit under the same label. They belong to one connected romantic universe with its own tone and chemistry.
A Not So Meet Cute sets that tone especially well. It takes a familiar romantic-comedy setup and pushes it into Meghan Quinn territory: flashy, funny, emotionally overcommitted, and fully aware of how absurd wealthy-people problems can be when mixed with real vulnerability. The book works because the comedy never feels detached from the romance. Beneath the performance, pretense, and verbal sparring, Quinn is still interested in two people being forced into honesty much sooner than they would like.
So Not Meant to Be keeps the same world but shifts into a different emotional rhythm. Where the first book thrives on setup and image, this one leans harder into antagonism, history, and the pleasure of watching two people who are absolutely not supposed to work together become impossible for each other to ignore. That shift is important because it keeps the series from becoming repetitive. Quinn understands that a connected rom-com line needs more than recurring family names. It needs each couple to generate its own kind of friction.
A Long Time Coming continues that broader Cane-world appeal by moving toward a relationship with more emotional history and more long-buried feeling underneath the humor. By that point, the series is not just running on billionaire glamour. It is running on familiarity. Readers know the circle, know the energy of the family, and know that Quinn likes to reward long-simmering attraction with emotional payoff that feels bigger because the world around it is already established.
Untying the Knot is the book that slightly changes the shape of the line. Rather than simply introducing another fresh billionaire romance, it revisits an existing couple and looks at what happens after the apparent happy ending. That makes it feel less like a standard next installment and more like a companion or spin-off within the same universe. It is still recognizably part of the series, but it broadens the emotional range by showing that Quinn is willing to look beyond courtship and into what commitment actually costs once the big romantic moment has passed.
That willingness to mix high-concept comedy with real relationship strain is what gives the Billionaire Rom Coms books more substance than the label alone might suggest. Yes, these are funny, sexy, escapist romances full of money, beautiful people, and extravagant setups. But the deeper hook is the same one Quinn returns to again and again: people who are performing control, confidence, or indifference until love ruins the script.
Beneath an already completed list, the best way to understand this series is as Meghan Quinn’s polished billionaire-rom-com world: connected, loud, affectionate, and emotionally sharper than it first appears. The luxury and chaos are part of the fun, but the real draw is the chemistry, the family dynamic, and Quinn’s ability to turn outrageous romantic setups into stories that still feel warm, satisfying, and fully alive.