More than six months after announcing her separation from Brian Fichera, Dylan Dreyer has officially filed for divorce.
On Tuesday, March 17, Us Weekly reported that Dreyer, 44, filed the paperwork one week prior on March 10, and a source told the outlet that the Today meteorologist, along with her and Fichera’s children – sons Calvin, 9, Oliver, 6, and Russell, 4 – have relocated to Long Island.
“They are thriving in their new town, and the kids are happy,” the source told the publication. “They have a great new routine. She loves her job and loves that she can be home with the kids after school. She’s very involved.”
However, the source added that the “split was painful,” but that she and Fichera, 38, “do a lot together.”
“Dylan struggled with the idea of starting over and having this new life after being married for so many years,” the source explained. “But with time, she kind of put that aside and focused on the kids.”
Dreyer and Fichera first married in 2012, but in July 2025, she announced via Instagram that they had decided to part ways.
Instagram/Brian Fichera
“I want to share with you that a few months ago, Brian and I made the decision to separate. We began as friends, and we will remain the closest of friends,” she wrote at the time. “Most importantly, we will continue to co-parent our three wonderful boys together with nothing but love and respect for one another.”
As Star previously reported, a few months after the announcement, Dreyer opened up about their split.
“I appreciate everyone’s comments that have spoken up about my life and our decisions and what we have decided as a family, thank you for your opinions on that,” she said while stepping in as a temporary cohost of Today With Jenna & Friends on November 5, 2025.
“Everybody has their reasons for what leads to a separation or divorce,” she continued. “That’s another story with a lot of wine and that’s a whole different thing, but either way we’ve gotten to this place.”
Dreyer admitted that there was something “broken” in her and Fichera’s marriage.
“There’s something freeing, I think, for Brian and I where — whatever reasons, whatever broke in a marriage — you could either fix it if you can and ideally you would and you try, and you try to fix things. Or you accept that it’s broken and you take this new step forward,” she said at the time. “We are no longer husband and wife and all those things that were broken, I don’t hold them against you because we’ve accepted they’re broken.”