After months of fighting it out in public and in court, Kandi Burruss and Todd Tucker have reached a divorce settlement.
According to court filings submitted to Fulton County Superior Court on March 11, Burruss and Tucker told the court they had agreed to a full and final settlement in their divorce case. The court then ordered them to turn in final paperwork covering child support and a formal parenting plan by the following week. The exact terms remain under seal, but the filing closes one of reality TV’s messier splits in recent months.
The divorce did not stay quiet for long. What Burruss first presented publicly in late 2025 as a personal decision rooted in peace quickly turned into a harder legal fight. The biggest flashpoint was custody. Burruss initially sought joint custody of their children, Ace and Blaze. Tucker responded by asking for primary custody, arguing that Burruss had been spending long stretches working in New York while he was in Georgia caring for the kids. Burruss pushed back on that version of events and reportedly noted that Tucker had been staying in a guest house on her property after moving out of the main home.
That tension spilled beyond court documents. When Burruss appeared on Watch What Happens Live in February, she said the marriage was effectively over for her by July 2025. “In July was when I was like, ‘Oh, yeah. No, I can’t do this no more,’” she said, while declining to get into the specific incident that pushed her there. Even then, she kept her public line focused on the children and co-parenting, saying her priority was “protecting my peace” and making sure the kids did not absorb the fallout.
The breakup also reopened questions around the couple’s larger business and personal entanglements. Burruss later clarified that reports about Tucker challenging their prenup were not quite that simple, saying it was more a legal strategy between attorneys than something he personally drove. At the same time, a separate legal dispute tied to their former restaurant, Blaze Steak and Seafood, added more noise to an already ugly stretch, with the parent company ordered to pay $140,509 in a landlord dispute over unpaid rent and remediation costs.
Now that the settlement is in place, Burruss appears to be doing what she has said she wanted all along: move on, protect the kids, and get back to the creative life that feels more like herself.

