
Holly Ramsay has publicly shared that she is pregnant with her first child with her new husband, Adam Peaty.
Holly, 26, daughter of restaurant mogul Gordon Ramsay, and Olympic gold medal swimmer Adam, 31, tied the knot at the end of December last year in a star-studded wedding at Bath Abbey attended by the Beckhams and stars like Sara Davies and Marcus Wareing.
Adam’s family, bar his sister Bethany as a bridesmaid, were notably absent from the festivities after revealing they were uninvited from the big day, a situation the athlete has only addressed once on social media.
Six months into marriage, it looks like the newlyweds – who both go by the surname Ramsay Peaty – are excited to start growing their family.
In a new post to social media, Holly shared a picture of her and Adam lovingly looking into one another’s eyes with her bump on full display. She also confirmed they are expecting a daughter.
The caption reads: ‘Baby Ramsay-Peaty coming December 2026. We can’t wait to meet our baby girl.’
Well wishes have already started pouring in, with Victoria Beckham commenting: ‘Congratulations!!!!!’ with multiple heart emojis and son Romeo echoing with two heart emojis.
‘Omg huge congratulations!! Love ya champ,’ internet personality Luke Hamnett shared.
Olympic swimmer Ollie Morgan said: ‘Congrats both’, and world_aquatics official account also added their own congratulations.
The Peaty ‘family feud’ was made public in November when his mum was absent from Holly’s hen do, and later his brother James was arrested over allegations he sent threats to the Olympian during his stag-do in Budapest.
Ahead of their wedding, Adam released a statement addressing the ‘challenging times’ and urged people to remember there were ‘two sides to every story’ with his mum, Caroline, vocal about her ‘heartbreak’ after the estrangement.
His now father-in-law, Gordon, has also gone to bat for the couple.
In February, he claimed that he had acted as a bully towards Adam’s parents ‘absolute nonsense’ and had previously dubbed the troubles ‘upsetting’ but ‘self-inflicted’ by the opposing party.