Todd and Julie Chrisley are officially back home in Nashville after receiving pardons from President Donald Trump. The couple was released Wednesday from separate prisons in Florida and Kentucky and made their way back to Music City.
Realtor.com reported Thursday that the Chrisleys are expected to move back into their longtime family home in Belle Meade, a wealthy enclave just southwest of downtown Nashville. The home has belonged to them since 2016.
The property spans more than half an acre and features over 5,200 square feet of living space. Realtor.com noted the kitchen includes a large island and a wet bar, making it perfect for entertaining.
The Chrisley family originally paid $1.6 million for the house, according to property records cited by the outlet. FOX Business reached out to their attorney for comment but hadn’t received a response.
Their daughter Savannah posted an emotional Instagram video ahead of their return, showing preparations for their homecoming. “Getting some clothes together for mom and dad, getting their room together upstairs, and I’m just speechless,” she said.
The pardons came more than two-and-a-half years after Todd and Julie were convicted of defrauding banks out of over $30 million and evading taxes. They were sentenced to 12 and seven years respectively, though those terms had already been reduced before the pardon.
The couple wasted no time enjoying their freedom. Julie was spotted visiting a local butcher shop, while Todd was later seen at a Nordstrom.
During a Friday press conference, Savannah expressed her gratitude: “It’s honestly felt like such a dream to have them at home… I’m just so grateful, obviously, to President Trump, the administration, [Trump pardon czar] Alice Johnson, just everyone within the pardons office.”
Todd reflected on his first morning back. “I don’t even know that I felt like it was real at that moment… I was looking around, and I’m like, ‘This is real, I’m home.’ So I was grateful for our family to all be back in the same room, to be together, to share a meal together, to pray together, and to know that we’re still in the fight together.”