This review may contain spoilers
Love You Teacher Is Emotional, Warm, and Easily PerthSanta’s Best Work Yet
Love You Teacher was honestly one of my most anticipated Thai BL dramas of 2026, mainly because I completely fell for the pairing of Perth Tanapon and Santa Pongsapak in Perfect 10 Liners. From the moment the mock trailer appeared during GMMTV’s 2025 lineup reveal, I already had a feeling this pairing would work beautifully in a full-length series. When the official trailer finally dropped, my excitement only doubled. Thankfully, the actual series more than lived up to the hype. This is genuinely PerthSanta’s best project so far.
Produced by GMMTV and Parbdee Taweesuk, Love You Teacher mixes romance, school-life comedy, emotional drama, and caregiving themes into something that feels surprisingly fresh and emotionally layered. The story follows Pobmek, an elementary school teacher who does not really enjoy dealing with children, and his boyfriend Solar, a naturally gentle and caring teacher loved by everyone around him. Their relationship is already established from the start, which immediately makes the series feel different from the usual BL setup.
Everything changes after Solar experiences a traumatic accident that causes neurological damage and occasional mental regression into his seven-year-old self, Sun. It is definitely a strange and risky concept, and I will admit the constant switching between an adult man and a childlike personality can feel uncomfortable at times. But to the show’s credit, it handles the premise far more carefully than expected. Instead of turning it into something exploitative, the story focuses on the emotional consequences of caregiving, grief, exhaustion, and unconditional love.
Santa absolutely shines here. His ability to switch between Solar and Sun is honestly impressive, and I found myself fully invested in understanding his condition and emotional state. Perth is equally fantastic as Pobmek, especially during the heavier scenes where his frustration, sadness, guilt, and emotional burnout become overwhelming. I started tearing up from the very first episode, and from there the series had me emotionally invested every single week.
The chemistry between Perth and Santa remains one of the show’s biggest strengths. Their relationship feels natural, affectionate, and lived-in, which makes the emotional scenes hurt even more. Flashbacks showing how they met and fell in love help balance the present-day heaviness of the story beautifully.
Another standout for me was Kay Lertsittichai as Jee. It was refreshing seeing him play someone genuinely kind, cheerful, and approachable for once, and he added so much warmth to the school setting.
Visually, the series is one of GMMTV’s strongest-looking productions recently. The colours, costumes, and overall art direction feel vibrant and comforting without losing emotional depth. The school environment actually feels alive rather than just existing as a backdrop. Even the humour blends naturally with the heavier moments instead of ruining the emotional tone.
The soundtrack is also excellent, especially “Written in Our Hearts” (ขีดเขียนเรื่องเรา). Perth’s performance of the song feels incredibly sincere and emotional, and you can genuinely feel the authenticity in the way he sings it.
What makes Love You Teacher stand out is how much it tries to talk about within only ten episodes. Beyond Solar’s condition, the series explores adult friendships, difficult family expectations, emotional insecurity, teacher burnout, children dealing with pressure, and the painful reality of constantly being compared to others. Pobmek’s struggles especially felt relatable because many people grow up feeling pressured to meet expectations that were never truly their own.
At times, the drama probably tries to cover too many themes too quickly, and some conflicts get resolved faster than they realistically should. Still, I appreciated that the series was willing to have these conversations at all. Even with its flaws, the emotional sincerity behind everything remains strong.
I also loved the small finale appearances from Keen Suwijak Piyanopharoj as Thara and Sea Dechchart Tasilp as Wayo as intern teachers. It was a fun little surprise for viewers.
Overall, Love You Teacher is emotional, heartfelt, visually polished, and incredibly bingeable. It is the kind of series that quietly pulls you into its world until you suddenly realise how attached you have become to the characters. The premise may require some suspension of disbelief, but the warmth, performances, and emotional honesty make it worth the ride. For me, this easily became one of the best and most memorable Thai BL dramas of 2026.
Produced by GMMTV and Parbdee Taweesuk, Love You Teacher mixes romance, school-life comedy, emotional drama, and caregiving themes into something that feels surprisingly fresh and emotionally layered. The story follows Pobmek, an elementary school teacher who does not really enjoy dealing with children, and his boyfriend Solar, a naturally gentle and caring teacher loved by everyone around him. Their relationship is already established from the start, which immediately makes the series feel different from the usual BL setup.
Everything changes after Solar experiences a traumatic accident that causes neurological damage and occasional mental regression into his seven-year-old self, Sun. It is definitely a strange and risky concept, and I will admit the constant switching between an adult man and a childlike personality can feel uncomfortable at times. But to the show’s credit, it handles the premise far more carefully than expected. Instead of turning it into something exploitative, the story focuses on the emotional consequences of caregiving, grief, exhaustion, and unconditional love.
Santa absolutely shines here. His ability to switch between Solar and Sun is honestly impressive, and I found myself fully invested in understanding his condition and emotional state. Perth is equally fantastic as Pobmek, especially during the heavier scenes where his frustration, sadness, guilt, and emotional burnout become overwhelming. I started tearing up from the very first episode, and from there the series had me emotionally invested every single week.
The chemistry between Perth and Santa remains one of the show’s biggest strengths. Their relationship feels natural, affectionate, and lived-in, which makes the emotional scenes hurt even more. Flashbacks showing how they met and fell in love help balance the present-day heaviness of the story beautifully.
Another standout for me was Kay Lertsittichai as Jee. It was refreshing seeing him play someone genuinely kind, cheerful, and approachable for once, and he added so much warmth to the school setting.
Visually, the series is one of GMMTV’s strongest-looking productions recently. The colours, costumes, and overall art direction feel vibrant and comforting without losing emotional depth. The school environment actually feels alive rather than just existing as a backdrop. Even the humour blends naturally with the heavier moments instead of ruining the emotional tone.
The soundtrack is also excellent, especially “Written in Our Hearts” (ขีดเขียนเรื่องเรา). Perth’s performance of the song feels incredibly sincere and emotional, and you can genuinely feel the authenticity in the way he sings it.
What makes Love You Teacher stand out is how much it tries to talk about within only ten episodes. Beyond Solar’s condition, the series explores adult friendships, difficult family expectations, emotional insecurity, teacher burnout, children dealing with pressure, and the painful reality of constantly being compared to others. Pobmek’s struggles especially felt relatable because many people grow up feeling pressured to meet expectations that were never truly their own.
At times, the drama probably tries to cover too many themes too quickly, and some conflicts get resolved faster than they realistically should. Still, I appreciated that the series was willing to have these conversations at all. Even with its flaws, the emotional sincerity behind everything remains strong.
I also loved the small finale appearances from Keen Suwijak Piyanopharoj as Thara and Sea Dechchart Tasilp as Wayo as intern teachers. It was a fun little surprise for viewers.
Overall, Love You Teacher is emotional, heartfelt, visually polished, and incredibly bingeable. It is the kind of series that quietly pulls you into its world until you suddenly realise how attached you have become to the characters. The premise may require some suspension of disbelief, but the warmth, performances, and emotional honesty make it worth the ride. For me, this easily became one of the best and most memorable Thai BL dramas of 2026.
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