Drew Sidora and her long-running divorce battle with Ralph Pittman has finally reached its conclusion, closing a chapter that many Real Housewives of Atlanta viewers watched unravel in real time.
According to court documents obtained by TMZ, a Georgia court finalized the former couple’s divorce on June 8, ending more than three years of legal disputes following their 2023 split. The final judgment awarded Ralph Pittman ownership of the couple’s Atlanta home, while Sidora was ordered to pay $2,218 per month in child support for their two children. She will receive approximately $145,000 for her share of the home’s equity, retain her Cadillac Escalade, keep the family dog, and neither party was awarded spousal support. Her legal name will also be restored to Jordan.
The outcome marks a dramatic end to a relationship that became one of the most discussed marriages on “RHOA.” Long before divorce papers were filed, viewers watched cracks form on camera. Storylines involving trust issues, communication breakdowns, and Ralph’s controversial solo trip to Tampa became recurring points of tension throughout the marriage.
By March 2023, both Sidora and Pittman filed separate divorce petitions within minutes of each other, each claiming the marriage was irretrievably broken.
As the case moved through court, the battle became increasingly contentious. Sidora accused Pittman of infidelity and emotional mistreatment, while the two fought over custody arrangements, finances, property, and living conditions. At one point, they were still residing in the same home despite actively divorcing, a situation Sidora later described as emotionally exhausting.
The legal fight intensified in 2026 when temporary court rulings ordered Sidora to vacate the marital home and granted Pittman primary physical custody during the school year. Sidora argued the move-out order could leave her without housing and pushed back against several temporary rulings before the court issued its final judgment.
In the end, Sidora did not secure primary custody, ownership of the marital residence, or the income figures she argued reflected Pittman’s finances. However, she walks away with a finalized divorce after years of litigation, a financial buyout from the home, ownership of personal assets, and perhaps most importantly, the ability to move forward.
For a marriage whose most difficult moments often played out in front of Bravo cameras, the final ruling delivers something both parties have spent years fighting for: closure.
