Comedians Tom Segura and Christina P. have separated after 18 years of marriage, with news of the split emerging on Monday, 13 July 2026, and described by those close to them as completely amicable.
The couple, who built one of comedy’s biggest podcast empires together, are said to have parted ways within the last couple of months, as reported by TMZ.
For a pair whose whole brand is oversharing on a microphone, the break has been handled with surprising quiet.
What we know about the Tom Segura and Christina P. split
The two married in 2008 and share two sons, Ellis, born in 2016, and Julian, born in 2018.
Over nearly two decades they turned their marriage into a business, most famously through their podcast Your Mom’s House, which helped define the modern comedy podcast scene.
Beyond that flagship show, the two built a wider network and separate careers, with Segura headlining Netflix stand-up specials and Christina P. hosting her own podcast, Where My Moms At?.
That shared business is part of what makes an amicable, keep-it-professional split the sensible public line for both of them.
A source close to the couple framed the separation as a partnership evolving rather than imploding.
“They had a special and productive relationship, creating one of the most successful comedy podcast networks in the industry and, more importantly, two kids,” the source said, setting the tone for how both plan to talk about it.
The same source made clear the children come first.
“They are taking different paths moving forward while remaining devoted to their children,” they said, echoing the amicable, no-drama version of events both camps appear to be leaning into.
What the separation means for their work
Here is the part fans actually want answered. The split does not spell the end of Your Mom’s House, with both Segura and Christina P. set to continue as co-hosts even after separating.
Their working relationship, in other words, is staying intact even as the marriage changes shape.
That is a tricky balance to pull off in public, since the show has always traded on their chemistry as a married couple riffing on daily life.
How that dynamic reads now, with the two navigating life as former partners still sitting across the same mics, is the open question hanging over the network they built.
Neither has offered a lengthy personal statement, and the tone so far suggests they would rather let the amicable framing stand than turn the breakup into content.
What happens next plays out episode by episode, as listeners tune in to hear how two of comedy’s most familiar voices carry a decade-old show into a very different chapter.







