Gwen Stefani and Gavin Rossdale have reached a settlement in their divorce. Eight months after announcing their split, the couple finally came to an agreement on a settlement, which they filed with the court on April 11 and the Bush frontmant is reportedly set to walk "away from millions."
Because the couple did not have a prenuptial agreement, the 50-year-old rocker is legally entitled to half of all money earned and assets accumulated during his nearly 13-year marriage to Stefani. However, according to TMZ, he has not exercised that right in a settlement filed with the court.
The singers have three sons together, Kingston, Zuma and Apollo, and agreed to 50/50 joint custody. But the site reports that Rossdale will likely have the boys more than 50 percent of the time since his ex will be so busy with her anticipated touring schedule.
The report added that Gavin hasn't even asked for child support, despite Stefani being the higher-earner. It is also claimed that the 46-year-old No Doubt singer will receive a larger portion of the couple's property from the settlement.
ICYMI: Gwen Stefani and Gavin Rossdale have reached a settlement in their divorce https://t.co/WXtEhoHDz5 pic.twitter.com/cUol1q7bhr
— People Magazine (@people) April 15, 2016
In August, the exes announced they were splitting after 20 years together. Their divorce fueled claims of infidelity between Rossdale and their former nanny.
Months after the breakup, Stefani began dating her newly single Voice costar Blake Shelton, who inspired her new album This Is What the Truth Feels Like, along with her divorce.
Now, all that’s left is for a judge to sign off on the agreement they’ve come to, and this thing is officially over! “Blake could propose to Gwen very soon,” Us Weekly reported. “Gwen is everything he wants.”
Exclusive: Blake Shelton is ready to propose to Gwen Stefani after 5 months of dating! https://t.co/4V8UfF3rsL pic.twitter.com/neSHDiXtHu — Us Weekly (@usweekly) April 13, 2016© 2025 Mstars News, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.