Amy Robach has gotten quite the upgrade of an engagement ring.
The former Good Morning America anchor confirmed her engagement to her former co-anchor TJ Holmes in October of last year, three years after their romance was exposed.
And in the podcast host's latest photos, the unique diamond certainly steals the show.
On Tuesday, March 31, T.J. took to his Instagram Story and shared a video of Amy, while the two were out for lunch at The Standard Grill in New York City's Meatpacking district.
It was a warm and sunny day in the city, and in the video Amy appears wearing a black tank-top with jeans.
Caught in the middle of a laugh, as she lifted her hands to her face, she highlighted her massive engagement ring: what appears to be a large cushion-cut yellow diamond with a white diamond halo set on a gold band.
Amy and T.J. have long been candid about their takes on marriage, and now they are just as well about when they will walk down the aisle.
Speaking on a March episode of their podcast about Zendaya and Tom Holland's penchant for privacy when it comes to their own wedding, they maintained they are "not married yet," but wouldn't be "doing a Tom and Zendaya thing."
However, Amy went on to share that she does believe they now spend more time together than most married couples. "We spend more time together — this is an absolute fact — than 99.9% of married folks. We might as well be," she said, adding, "I have spent more time with you in the last three years than I have with any other living human being."
As with T.J., this will be the third marriage for Amy, who was previously married to Tim McIntosh, with whom she shares two daughters, and later to Andrew Shue.
In 2024, while speaking with T.J. on their podcast about the cost of engagement rings, she revealed she never received one from her second husband, recalling: "My first one was $3,000," before revealing: "I didn't even really have one the second time," later adding: "My second one didn't exist."
Though she didn't elaborate on why she didn't get an engagement ring from Andrew, she did note: "I also think this is a cautionary tale because we do know that close to fifty percent of all marriages end in divorce … If you think you've got some valuable property in a ring, no matter how much you've spent, wait till you have to try to sell that said ring. It is pennies to what you actually purchased. So these beautiful pieces of jewelry don't appreciate."









