The "Chrisley Knows Best" reality stars met in the 1990s and have multiple kids together. Now, they're on trial for bank fraud and tax evasion.
On a March episode of the couple's podcast "Chrisley Confessions," Todd recalled the first time he met Julie.
"She walked into my friend's house, and it was during the winter months, and I remember when she walked in and she smiled, I thought, 'She has got the most beautiful smile I have ever seen,'" Todd said.
He added, "She's the only woman who has ever literally touched my soul."
The couple married on May 25, 1996, while Julie was nine months pregnant with their first child.
This was Todd's second marriage — he previously wed his high-school girlfriend Teresa Terry in 1990 and they had two children together before finalizing their divorce in 1996. (In 2016, according to court documents viewed by the Daily Mail, Terry alleged that Todd waged "a campaign of mental and physical abuse" against her during their divorce.)
Some publications, including Life & Style magazine and Radar Online, report that Julie was previously married. Insider could not verify these reports.
Less than one week after the wedding, Julie gave birth to son Chase Chrisley on June 1, 1996.
The following year the couple welcomed their first daughter together, Savannah, on August 11, 1997.
Todd and Julie's third child was born May 16. He recently celebrated his 16th birthday.
He is the couple's youngest biological child — Todd and Julie got custody of Todd's oldest son's daughter, Chloe, in the 2010s.
After several friends received cancer diagnoses, Todd urged Julie to get a mammogram and it showed she had breast cancer, according to The Tennessean's 2018 interview with Julie.
She had a double mastectomy and began cancer treatment. Julie recalled Todd helping her wash her hair and remove her bandages after the surgery.
"I truly believe that that moment took our relationship to a whole other level because he never flinched," she said in the interview.
She continued, "He was in the shower with me, he took all of my bandages off, and he never flinched."
The reality show "Chrisley Knows Best," which has recently been renewed for its 10th season, debuted in 2014.
The series follows the couple and their family during their day-to-day lives.
In August 2018, the first episode of Todd and Julie's podcast "Chrisley Confessions" was released on the iHeartRadio network.
Per the podcast's description, the hosts "offer advice, suggestions, and opinions on all things faith, family, food, and well, just about everything else."
For the pair's anniversary, Todd shared a photo of Julie on Instagram and wrote in the caption, "24 years ago I was fortunate enough to make this woman my wife... "
He continued, "I was fortunate enough to marry the only woman I've ever loved , my best friend , my person that truly gave me the confidence to take on this crazy world and prosper spiritually , emotionally , psychologically and financially ... "
In February, the pair played the "Not-So-Newly Married Game" with Us Weekly and spoke about their first date at a Mexican restaurant and who said "I love you" first (Julie said Todd did and Todd said Julie did).
"I knew that I was in love with her the moment she walked into my friend's house: That's the first night that I met her," Todd told Us Weekly.
On a March episode of "Chrisley Confessions," per Us Weekly, Julie said she was cancer-free after 10 years.
She said her doctor allowed her to stop taking cancer-treating drugs that caused some difficult side effects.
"I have been very vocal about talking about my journey and I will continue doing that because if it helps one person then, you know, I feel like all the stuff that I've gone through has not been in vain," Julie said. "But I was very happy to get a good result today."
"Today's a celebration," Todd said.
Todd and Julie are currently on trial in Atlanta, Georgia, for bank fraud and tax evasion.
Per Insider's Haven Orecchio-Egresitz, federal prosecutors allege the Chrisleys and their accountant— initially indicted in 2019 — submitted fake documents and fabricated their wealth to banks when applying for loans.
Read more about the case and trial here.