Kylie Kelce Shares the Real Reason She & Jason Decided To Have a Fourth Baby

Kylie and Jason Kelce are preparing to add a fourth little girl to their family – a decision that surprised some fans who thought the couple might be stopping at three kids. But on this week’s episode of her new podcast, Not Gonna Lie, Kylie shared the reason they ultimately decided to try for another baby, and it’s something that a lot of moms are going to be able to relate to.

More from CafeMom: Fans Spot Taylor Swift Book in Kylie Kelce’s New Instagram Video

Jason left the decision up to Kylie.

On the podcast, Kylie said Jason left the ball in her court when expanding their family was concerned.

“Jason was always like, ‘I’ll do whatever you wanna do,’ and I was always in the camp of I wanted four with room for one pleasant surprise,” she said. “Which I really think we got to three, and I was like, three is cool. This feels good.”

She thought she might have been done at three.

Jason and Kylie are already parents to daughters Wyatt, 5, Elliotte, 3, and Bennett, who turns 2 in February. Kylie thought Bennett might have completed their family, but once they were past that sleepless newborn phase, all bets were off.

“Then we got out of the rough baby sleeping and all that, and then I was just like, you know what? I really like even numbers,” she said on the podcast.

Kylie admitted that her fourth daughter may also be her last.

Like she mentioned, she was open to a “surprise” fifth baby before, but wrangling four little ones might end up being her limit.

“I think it might get shut down after this one. We’re gonna have this next kid and I’m gonna be like, ‘Don’t even look at me. Just eyes at the floor. Don’t look at me,'” she joked.

More from CafeMom: Kylie Kelce Admits She Cried for 30 Minutes After Finding Out Her Second Baby Was a Girl

Kylie's podcast is still new, but it's very successful.

In fact, Not Gonna Lie managed to dethrone Joe Rogan for the No. 1 podcast spot after its premiere. But as Kylie told The New York Times this week, that’s not really her main goal for the podcast.

“I’m focused on putting out content that people like to consume,” she said. “If that puts us there for a week, cool. If it puts us there for longer than that, cool. But I also don’t need to feed any conflict that’s created by it.”

She also mentioned how important it is for her daughters to have as normal a childhood as possible.

She told the Times that includes sending them to public school, despite their family’s money or influence.

“I assume this isn’t always going to be our life, and I don’t want them to be impacted in some way that twists them into thinking that this is normal,” she shared.