Chris Hughes Says Jojo Siwa Relationship Stays Manageable Across 1-Year Mark
Chris Hughes says his jojo siwa relationship is still manageable, even with the UK-U.S. split built into their routine. The 33-year-old said the pair saw each other every month before the last couple of months, and that frequent travel has kept the pressure lower than many assume.
Monthly flights and family time
Hughes said their setup works because both can get on a flight when time allows. “It is tricky, but it's not as tricky as people think,” he told the Daily Mail newspaper, adding, “So many people ask me this, and it's like, before the last couple of months, we'd see each other every month, one way or another, whether she be over here or I go out there, so it's never as strenuous as people think.”
He said that flexibility has made a difference in a relationship that started after they met on UK reality show Celebrity Big Brother last year. For the couple, the practical answer has been repeated trips across the Atlantic, not a dramatic reinvention of how long-distance dating works.
Chris Hughes in the U.S.
Hughes returned from the United States over the weekend after celebrating Siwa’s birthday, and said the visit included three days on the bounce of golf with her family. “That was lovely out there with the family. We played golf three days on the bounce. She's now a very avid golfer, which is so perfect for me,” he said.
He also said, “I didn't think she'd necessarily want to play golf on her birthday, and she actually did. So that was like a win-win situation. But yeah, things are great.” He described the recent stretch apart as the longest they have gone without seeing each other, saying, “It's the first time I'd seen her for a number of months, the longest time we've been apart.”
One year, one Wednesday
The couple will be apart for their one year anniversary on Wednesday, 27.05.26, which gives the relationship a clean test at a point when both have already treated travel as part of the deal. Siwa has said, “So we're getting there, but we've got time,” and added, “It's been the best year ever, and it's only gonna go up from here.”
Hughes’ view is the firmer one: when travel is possible, the distance stops looking like a crisis and starts looking like logistics. That is the real story here — not whether the miles exist, but that both seem willing to keep paying for the flights.