British R&B trio FLO released the official music video for "Don't Break Her Heart" on June 5, 2026, a cinematic short film directed by Troy Roscoe that matches the song's sisterhood energy with a fully committed genre concept. The clip β currently streaming on YouTube via Republic Records β is the third visual from FLO's upcoming sophomore album Therapy at the Club, due July 24, 2026.
In the video, members Stella Quaresma, RenΓ©e Downer, and Jorja Douglas play operatives of "Filthy Little Operations," a fictional London-based firm that specializes in tracking down no-good partners on behalf of their clients. The setup functions as both a nod to classic girl-group loyalty narratives and a genuinely funny conceptual vehicle β equal parts spy thriller and sisterhood anthem, with the group moving through London's streets in coordinated surveillance gear before closing in on their target with escalating chaos and precision.
Key Facts
- "Don't Break Her Heart" official video released June 5, 2026 via Republic Records
- Directed by Troy Roscoe; set in London
- FLO members play operatives of "Filthy Little Operations" β a fictional firm tracking cheating lovers
- Third single from FLO's sophomore album Therapy at the Club, due July 24, 2026
- The song combines '90s R&B smooth production with sisterhood loyalty lyricism
- FLO performed the track live at BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend 2026
What Happens in the Video
The clip opens on the trio assembled at their operations base, receiving a briefing from a client whose partner has been stepping out. From there, "Don't Break Her Heart" becomes a sharply edited surveillance procedural: the group tails the subject across London, communicates via earpiece, and eventually corners the cheating lover in a confrontation that tips from tense to comedic without losing the emotional throughline. Troy Roscoe β who has directed videos for a range of UK and U.S. artists β shoots London's streets with a color palette that leans warm gold and deep red, creating a visual language that feels distinct from the oversaturated digital look common in contemporary R&B videos.
The concept is cinematic without becoming self-serious. FLO's chemistry β always the group's strongest asset in visual work β carries the narrative even in its more heightened moments. The trio's ability to sell the absurdity of the spy premise while keeping the song's emotional message intact is a testament to how clearly they understand their own brand of storytelling.
"This one is for your best friend. If somebody breaks her heart, we're pulling up."β FLO, on the concept behind 'Don't Break Her Heart,' 2026
The Song and Its Context
"Don't Break Her Heart" as a track combines silky, smooth '90s R&B production with cheeky lyricism that warns a potential partner not to hurt the group's best friend β or face consequences. The production walks the line between retro homage and contemporary polish, with a bass-forward low end that sits well in both streaming playlists and club settings. It follows two earlier Therapy at the Club singles that demonstrated the album's range, from introspective midtempo pieces to the more uptempo, confrontational energy of "Don't Break Her Heart."
FLO performed the track live at BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend 2026 shortly before the video's release, giving UK audiences a stage preview before the visual dropped. The performance was widely shared across social media and served as effective pre-release momentum for the clip.
Therapy at the Club β What to Expect
Therapy at the Club, FLO's sophomore album, is due July 24, 2026, via Republic Records. The three singles released ahead of the album β including "Don't Break Her Heart" β suggest a project that balances emotional depth with the kind of dancefloor-ready production that made the group's debut such an immediate cultural reference point. The album title itself encodes the tension: serious emotional work done in the least serious possible setting.
Watch the official video for "Don't Break Her Heart" on FLO's YouTube channel. Follow LoudDrip's Video section for continued coverage of new visual releases across R&B, hip-hop, and beyond.


