Jason Biggs and his wife, Jenny Mollen, have called it quits after 18 years of marriage.
The couple remains on great terms and is focused on raising their two sons, Lazlo, 8, and Sid, 12, their spokesperson told Page Six on Thursday.
There have been reports that there have been rumblings of a split for at least nine months.
An insider told People that the exes just spent the American Pie star’s 48th birthday together on Tuesday.
“They are very much connected,” the source said. “I have no doubt that they will remain on excellent terms.”
Biggs, 48, and Mollen, 46, first crossed paths while working on the Howard Deutch-directed film My Best Friend’s Girl in 2007.
They were engaged by January 2008 and eloped that April.
The two renewed their vows in front of their family and friends in Napa, California, in July 2008.
Biggs and Mollen welcomed their first child together, Sid, in 2014, followed by Lazlo in 2017.
The duo have shied away from sharing too much of their marital life online. One of Mollen’s last photos with her estranged husband was posted in November 2025.
In it, the actress holds onto Biggs’ arm as they beam for the camera.
“A totally approachable couple not trying to seduce you,” she captioned the pic.
Additionally, Mollen gave the Loser star a special shoutout for his 47th birthday last May alongside a PDA-packed throwback photo.
“This is a pic of us at your surprise thirtieth [birthday party],” she wrote.
“We were married and yet I still knew practically nothing about you. Like for example, the fact that you hate surprises. Luckily, we made it past that hurdle. Happy 47th, I promise I planned nothing.”
Biggs previously opened up about his and Mollen’s marital issues in the past, revealing how he used to hide his alcohol addiction from his wife.
“I knew how to get wasted enough to where I took myself out of the life equation, took myself out of the present, didn’t have to connect in a way that made me feel things,” he explained on his wife’s All the Fails podcast in March 2024.
“I had it figured out to a T. To not get too drunk where I couldn’t have a conversation with you. I was replacing those bottles in the bar all the time.”
This story originally appeared on Page Six and is republished here with permission.