Review aggregation website
Metacritic gave the series a score of 74 out of 100, based on reviews from 5 critics. Daniel Fienberg of
The Hollywood Reporter praised the series: "I’m honestly not quite sure which audience is going to crave a series like
Red Alert, but I can vouch that despite occasional irritatingly visible attempts to evoke response, it’s breathlessly effective."
James Poniewozik reviewed the series for
The New York Times, praising Vino: "(Sara Vino is a standout in this last role, giving her character a human-scale, stubborn bravery.)". Poniewozik felt that the series "cannot avoid existing in a political environment." while acknowledging that "Artists, of course, are not governed by an equal-time rule. They are not obligated to tell every story, even when basing their work on real events." He continued to add that the series does "seek above all to ensure that the dead are not forgotten, with an air of duty and occasionally a mournful beauty." He concluded that the series is one of the "first-draft attempts to fix a single, terrible day in the cultural record, even as history keeps rolling forward." On 1 October, 2025, the
BBC grouped the series with
One Day in October in its list of "11 of the best TV shows to watch this October." In Israel, the series was praised by Roy Dahan writing in
Maariv: "
Red Alert managed to convey everything - the anxiety, the loss, but also the hope and strength that grew out of the darkness." The series has been widely viewed in Israel, with the first episode watched by nearly 18% of the Israeli public. According to Keshet, it has become the most viewed drama on all Israeli TV channels in the past decade. ==References==