“Real Housewives of New Jersey” alum Lauren Manzo and her husband, Vito Scalia, have reportedly called it quits after eight years of marriage.
According to documents obtained by the US Sun, Scalia filed for divorce in New Jersey on Sept. 5 due to “irreconcilable differences.”
He claimed in the docs that the former couple had been having issues “for a period of at least six months which has caused the breakdown of their marriage.”
He added that it is “apparent that the marriage should be dissolved” because “there is no reasonable prospect of reconciliation.”
Manzo was served the divorce papers on Sept. 29, per the outlet.
Manzo, 35, and Scalia, 37, apparently still live together in their Wayne, N.J., home with their 6-year-old daughter, Marchesa, since their addresses are the same in the filing.
Reps for the former couple weren’t immediately available for comment to Pvnew.
Fans had been speculating about whether the restaurant owner and the TV personality called it quits since Manzo seemingly stopped wearing her ring in March.
“Where’s Vito? Are you guys still married?” one fan commented on a snap from May.
“Are you and Vito still married?” another wondered under a photo from June.
The US Sun reported that the “RHONJ” alum fired back in a now-deleted post from July after a fan asked about Scalia’s whereabouts, saying that she’s “allowed to keep aspects of my life private, especially after having a child.”
The former Bravolebrity’s split from her estranged husband comes after he previously shut down divorce rumors in January 2018.
At the time, he exclusively told Pvnew that the breakup speculation was “absolutely not true,” despite Manzo not posting photos of him on social media.
“We just don’t put our relationship on social media and people can’t seem to understand that,” he wrote on Facebook at the time. “We are perfect!!!!!!”
The “Manzo’d With Children” alums tied the knot in 2015 in a fairytale wedding that aired on Bravo.
They started dating in 2009 after meeting through Manzo’s brother and got engaged four years later.