BEN Cohen and Strictly star Kristina Rihanoff have put their £1.75millon house up for sale after revealing they’re fighting to save their marriage.
The couple had met when they were partnered for the 11th series of Strictly Come Dancing in 2013, and fell in love.
And the pair previously revealed they got engaged during a sun-soaked Maldives getaway in 2022.
But recently they’ve been plagued with relationship and financial woes, which they laid bare in court.
Now, their family home in Sywell has been put up for sale, the MailOnline reports, and it’s been described as a “superb family home offering spacious and versatile living accommodation” on RightMove.
The couple bought their Northamptonshire home in 2016 and put it up for sale on September 19.
The very spacious property sits on a plot of 1.73acres of land and also boasts an “impressive kitchen breakfast/family living area”.
The sale of the house comes after their money troubles were brought to light, following the Covid pandemic in 2020.
Rugby World Cup winner Mr Cohen, 45, appeared alongside Rihanoff, 46, after she was caught driving her £30,000 Audi Q3 without insurance.
During a hearing at Northampton Crown Court Mr Cohen said he had ignored a text message from his insurance company.
Mr Cohen confirmed that he had been solely responsible for sourcing insurance for the couple's cars.
The court was told that Mr Cohen had been searching for cheaper insurance online at the end of February after being quoted £7,500 by Aviva.
The court also heard they had set up several businesses, including a Yoga studio, which had suffered as a result of Covid.
Mr Cohen said: "I get up every day and I fight not to lose everything - to lose my cars and my house and my relationship. I'm so overdrawn."
When questioned about the strains on his and Rihanoff's relationship, he said: "We're still living together.
"We're in it financially.
"We're in business together so the problem is that we opened the business before Covid and we got the worst severities of it and in all honestly this is just another problem for me to deal with.
"I've got credit cards that are overdrawn. I'm overdrawn in both accounts. We have got a business debt because of Covid.
"It's just another problem."
Rihanoff sobbed throughout the hearing and had to leave the court room holding her hands over her mouth because she felt sick.
She spent the rest of the hearing wrapped in a white blanket holding a tissue to her eyes.
She told the court she needed to drive to judge ballroom competitions across the country which earned her £2,000-a-month.
She also said she needed to drive to take her children to school.
Recorder Louise Cox rejected her appeal, but told Rihanoff she had "every sympathy" with her.
She said: "We find you had an honest belief you were insured but don't accept that belief was reasonable grounds to account for your lack of insurance."
She said that Rihanoff should have made sure she was insured before driving.
She was spared a driving ban due to "exceptional hardship" despite totting up 12 penalty points.
The court heard Rihanoff needs a car to take her two daughters to school.
The court heard her eight-year-old step-daughter suffers from a heart condition and she takes her to Great Ormond Street Hospital for treatment.
Rihanoff lives 25 minutes from her dance studio and travels around the UK at weekend judging dance competitions.
Rihanoff, of Ecton Lane, Sywell, Northants., was ordered to pay £357 in appeal costs.