Pink took to social media to quickly shut down reports of a split from husband Carey Hart after 20 years of marriage.
The "Raise Your Glass" singer and the former professional motorcycle driver tied the knot in 2006, and previously separated in 2008 before getting back together almost a year later.
The couple are parents to two kids, daughter Willow, 14, and son Jameson, nine, who the singer referenced in her video response, which you can watch above.
People was first to report that Pink, born Alecia Beth Moore, and Carey separated. Their reps did not respond to HELLO!'s request for comment as of writing.
Pink, 46, and Carey, 50, first met in 2001 at the Summer X Games in Philadelphia and dated on and off before their 2005 engagement and their nuptials the following year.
While they're still going strong, they have long been candid about the ups and downs of their relationship, including their 2008 separation, during which they remained amicable, later reconciling and calling off their divorce in April 2009.
At the time, Carey told People: "We're rebuilding. Sometimes you have to take a couple of steps backwards to move forward."
Shortly after, Pink joked on The Ellen DeGeneres Show: "We've had two breaks. The first one was about a year. And the second one was 11 months," adding that they were "due" for another.
In 2023, during her Summer Carnival World Tour, she also opened up about therapy and marriage counseling at a concert in Manchester, telling the crowd: "This is what they teach in marriage counseling: Remorse, regret, resolution."
Pink has previously also shouted out their own therapist Vanessa Linn, once writing on Instagram: "I got a lot of [expletive] for telling people that Carey and I have been in couples' counseling with Vanessa … So, I talk to Vanessa on my own and I also talk to Vanessa with Carey and for Carey and I."
"It's the only reason that we're still together," she added. "Because you know, I think partners after a long time, we just speak. I can't say it's a man and woman thing, I think it's a partner thing, a spouse thing — that you just speak two different languages."
"You need someone to hear both of you and then translate it for you, and without Vanessa translating for me for the last 18 years, I mean we would not be together. We just wouldn't because we are not taught as kids how to have relationships, how to get along with people."







