
Why Savannah Chrisley Is Moving Out Her Parents’ Nashville Mansion
Why Savannah Chrisley Is Moving Out of Todd Chrisley, Julie Chrisley’s Mansion After Prison Release
Savannah Chrisley is ready for a change.
One month after her parents Todd Chrisley and Julie Chrisley were released from prison, the Chrisley Knows Best alum is excited to go back to the carefree life of a 28-year-oldâand part of that experience is living on her own.
âI’m moving into a condo,” Savannah told Juju Chang in a family interview for ABC News Studiosâ IMPACT x Nightline.
But despite the perks of living in her parentsâ $1.6 million Nashville mansion, Savannah is ready to find something lower maintenance for herself.
“I’m not gonna miss landscapers,â she admitted, âI’m not gonna miss pool people.”
While her parents were in prison for tax fraud and evasion convictionsâthey received pardons from President Donald Trump on May 28âSavannah was raising her siblings Chloe Chrisley, 12âwhose dad is Toddâs son Kyle Chrisleyâand Grayson Chrisley, 19. And despite that immense responsibility, Todd wasnât too pleased with her homemaking skills.
“He comes in and is critiquing everything in the house,” she recalled. “I was literally fighting for y’all for two and a half years and raising kids, I think the floors are fine.”
On top of that, Savannah spent years tirelessly advocating to free Todd and Julieâwho were originally sentenced to 12 years and seven years, respectivelyâfrom behind bars. And after their release, Savannah was met with social media rumors and conspiracy theories rather than applause.
“Obviously, the biggest misconception right now is that I either paid for a pardon or slept for a pardon of something,” she said during a press conference last month. “If people knew the countless hours and the money and the time that I spent going to D.C., literally with not a meeting scheduled, and I just got on a plane and went and said, ‘I’m going to be in the right room at the right time and meet the right people.'”
“I fought hard and I was exhausted and I begged for meetings,” she continued. “I was never too good to ask. And that’s the thing, is people think, ‘Oh, you’re a celebrity, you’re white, you have money, that we got an upper hand,’ and we didn’t. I had to fight and I was relentless and that’s how it happened. Finally, people listened.”
For a complete timeline of Todd and Julieâs legal case, keep reading.
(Photo by Paul Archuleta/Getty Images)
Indicted on Tax Evasion and Other Charges
Todd and Julie Chrisley were indicted on 12 counts by a federal grand jury in Atlanta in August 2019 on charges included wire fraud, conspiracy to commit bank fraud and conspiracy to defraud the United States, according to a document obtained by NBC News. Prosecutors claimed fraud began in the mid-aughtsâinclusive of evading nearly $2 million in state taxes between 2008 and 2016 and hiding over $1 million dollars from the IRS.
The day before the indictment was issued, Todd maintained he and his wife were innocent, and instead said a trusted employee had been stealing from and blackmailing the couple.
“We have nothing to hide and have done nothing to be ashamed of,” he wrote in a statement posted to Instagram. “Not only do we know we’ve done nothing wrong, but we’ve got a ton of hard evidence and bunch of corroborating witnesses that proves it.”
(Photo by Danielle Del Valle/Getty Images for E3 Chophouse Nashville)
Todd and Julie Found Guilty
It wasnât until three years later that the Chrisley Knows Best stars went to trial. Following three weeks of testimonies, the pair, who had pleaded not guilty, were convicted on all counts of tax evasion and bank fraud on June 7, 2022.
The U.S. attorney’s office had alleged the duo and their accountant Peter Tarantinoâwho stood trial with themâconspired to defraud banks out of more than $30 million over the course of a decade.Â
“As today’s outcome shows, when you lie, cheat and steal, justice is blind as to your fame, your fortune, and your position,” Keri Farley, Special Agent in Charge of FBI Atlanta, said in a June 2022 statement. “In the end, when driven by greed, the verdict of guilty on all counts for these three defendants proves once again that financial crimes do not pay.”
(Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)
Sentenced to Multiple Years in Prison
Five months later, the Northern District of Georgia sentenced Todd to 12 years behind bars and Julie to seven years. (Peter was sentenced to three years in prison.)
“Over the course of a decade, the defendants defrauded banks out of tens of millions of dollars while evading payment of their federal income taxes,” U.S. Attorney Ryan K. Buchanan said in a November 2022 statement. “Their lengthy sentences reflect the magnitude of their criminal scheme and should serve as a warning to others tempted to exploit our nation’s community banking system for unlawful personal gain.”
However, Julie and Toddâs respective sentences were shortened in September 2023âwith Julie scheduled to be released a year and three months earlier, and Todd two years earlier than his originally scheduled 2035 release.
“Without a doubt, Todd and Julie are model incarcerated individuals who received exorbitant sentences,” Jay Surgent, the pair’s attorney, told Insider in September 2023. “I believe Todd is down to 10 years and Julie is now at five years.”
(Photo by: Andrew Eccles/USA Network/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images)
Starting Their Sentences
The couple started their respective prison sentences in January 2023, with Todd serving his time at Federal Correctional Institution (FPI) Pensacola in Florida and Julie at a different federal prison in Lexington, Kentucky.Â
(Photo by: Julie Holder/NBCUniversal Cable Entertainment/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images)
No Contact
Six months after Julie and Todd reported to their respective prisons, their daughter Savannah Chrisley shared insight into how the duo were doing, revealing that her parents did not have contact during their time behind bars.Â
“195 days without a word to each other⊔ she wrote in an August 2023 Instagram story. “My heart is breakingâŠPlease help to bring justice!”
She also pushed back at rumors about their time in prison.
“It’s hilarious because one of them was like, ‘Oh, he’s let himself go,'” she said on her Unlocked with Savannah Chrisley podcast. “First off, news flash, they don’t sell hair color in commissary. So of course his hair is gray! But, you know what, I would tell him today, if he was out, keep it that way. Like, it looks good! He’s got a great prison barber.”Â
(Photo by Santiago Felipe/Getty Images)
Todd Details Filthy Prison Conditions
However, Todd spoke out from behind bars about the mistreatment he faced at the federal prison camp in Pensacola, Fla.
“The food is dated,” he said in a phone interview on a December 2023 episode of Cuomo. “It’s a year past expiration.”
“You’ve got rats, you’ve got squirrels in the storage facility where the food is,” he continued. “They just covered it up with plastic and then tore the ceiling out because of all the black mold and found a dead cat in the ceiling, and it dropped down on the top of the food.”Â
Beyond the horrors in the cafeteria, he alleged that someone also attempted to extort his family members.
“There was a photograph taken of me while I was sleeping and sent to my daughter,” he noted, “asking for $2,600 dollars a month for my protection.”
(Photo by: Vivian Zink/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images)
Savannah Chrisley Speaks Out
Savannah, who has custody of younger siblings Grayson and Chloe amid her parentsâ sentences, has explained how their convictions and their lack of contact with one another has weighed on her.
“The last time they spoke was the morning they went into federal prison,” she shared with E! News March 2024, alleging that there’s “a lot of retaliation going on against my father for how outspoken we’ve been about conditions.”
In fact, she alleged that prison officials had been “blocking a lot of his emails correspondence to my mom.”
And while not wanting to make the experience about herself, she admitted that it was overwhelming at times.Â
“What’s tough for me is how Mom and Dad have that feeling that life is just continuing to move on without them,” Savannah explained on her podcast Unlocked in April 2024. “In a way, I have that feeling with people in my life because it’s like they just continue on living their lives.”
“I’m still sitting here struggling to catch my breath,” she continued. “Whether it’s financially with the kids, trying to parent, me in a relationship.”
(Photo by Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic)
Julie’s Prison Sentence Overturned
Julie’s seven-year prison sentence was overturned June 2024 following a three-judge panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Although the panel upheld her convictions, the court ruled the judge in the 2022 trial miscalculated the reality star’s sentence.Â
“The district court did not identify the evidence it relied on to hold Julie accountable for losses incurred before 2007, and we cannot independently find it in the record,” the judges stated in their ruling. “So we vacate Julie’s sentence and remand solely for the district court to make the factual findings and calculations necessary to determine loss, restitution, and forfeiture as to Julie and to resentence her accordingly.”
Her case was handed to a lower court to determine how her sentencing would be adjusted while Todd’s sentencing remained unaffected.
(Photo by Taylor Hill/FilmMagic)
A Tearful Apology
Three months after her prison sentence was overturned, an Atlanta court ultimately upheld Julieâs previous seven-year prison sentence. And she made a tearful apologyâboth to her children and the court.
“I would like to say Iâve had years to think about what Iâve wanted to say and Iâm sorry for my actions and situations that let us to where we are today,” Julie said before the court, per People, during the Sept. 25 hearing. “Iâve had 20 months in prison, but it has been much more leading up to the trial and I apologize for my actions that led to where we are today,”
“I have done everything I can do to get closer to my family. Iâve taken tests for new skills, such as driving a forklift and serving food in proper ways,” she continued, “this has been the most difficult part of my life. I canât ever repay my children for what theyâve had to go through and for that, I am so sorry,” she added.
USA Network/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images
President Donald Trump Pardons the Chrisleys
The Chrisleys are heading home. They received a presidential pardon from Donald Trump, he told Savannah in a phone call May 27, 2025.Â
“For the past two and a half years, Iâve done everything in my power to fight for my parentsâ freedom and bring them home,” Savannah said in a statement to E! News. “This moment is the answer to countless prayers, and I am beyond grateful to President Trump for seeing the truth and restoring my family.”
They were both released on May 28, 2025.
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