TV

Mormon Wives Star Whitney Leavitt Says She’s Done Having Kids After Son Billy

Mormon Wives Star Whitney Leavitt Says She’s Done Having Kids After Son Billy
Image credit: Legion-Media

The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives star Whitney Leavitt is closing the baby chapter, revealing on Instagram that son Billy, her third, will be her last—a bittersweet milestone for the 32-year-old mom.

Whitney Leavitt is having one of those life-comes-at-you-fast seasons: she just said out loud that her third baby is her last, she moved her family across the country, and she jumped from reality TV to Broadway. That is a lot of big swings in a short window.

The post: last-baby feelings, in real time

On Thursday, March 26, the 32-year-old star of The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives used her Instagram Story to process the big one: son Billy is officially the last baby for her and husband Conner Leavitt, 31. She called this chapter full, beautiful, and chaotic, but also so fast it kind of makes your head spin. The cliche about kids growing up overnight? She basically admitted it is cliche for a reason. Her takeaway: stay present, soak up the small moments.

She backed that up with a quick video from the bathroom, cradling Billy while singing and dancing with him, then planting a kiss on his cheek at the end. Simple, sweet, and very much that 'I know this stage won’t last' energy.

Where the family is at now

  • Daughter Sedona arrived in 2019.
  • Son Liam followed in 2021.
  • Son Billy joined the crew in 2024 — and, per Whitney, he is the last baby.

The career pivot: New York, Roxie Hart, and what that means for the show

Since welcoming Billy, Whitney and the family relocated to New York City. The reason: she landed Roxie Hart in Chicago on Broadway. That move has opened doors beyond reality TV, and she has been pretty open that it might also mean stepping away from The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives.

Asked point-blank about a possible exit in an interview published March 16 by The Hollywood Reporter, Whitney did not pretend she had a final answer. She said she and her team are still figuring it out together, that it feels like that is where things are heading, and that while she credits the show for getting her here, she also wants to push herself and chase goals she had before TV came calling.

'I am figuring it out in real time... it feels like that is the trajectory.'

There is also the group dynamic to consider. When THR pressed her on whether fellow MomTok members expect her to pass on big opportunities, she said she is not aware of any such expectation and no one has told her that. She even pulled a music analogy: if a group is working and one person is ready for a solo shot, the hope is everyone roots for each other. She cannot speak for the other women, but she thinks that is what is happening with her — grateful for the platform and the business they built together, but ready to branch out, and she believes they would back that move.

Bottom line

Between a final-baby milestone, a cross-country move, and a Broadway run, Whitney is juggling a personal and professional reset at the same time. And she is doing the very modern thing of letting everyone watch her figure it out as she goes.