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Blake Fielder-Civil Now: What Happened After Amy Winehouse Died

Jackson Ethan Mercer • 2026-07-13 • Reviewed by Hanna Berg

Blake Fielder-Civil’s name will forever be linked to Amy Winehouse, a connection that has shadowed his life long after their brief, chaotic marriage ended. In a rare 2026 interview, he pushed back against the narrative that he alone bears responsibility for her death, a claim that has fueled public fascination for over a decade.

Born: April 16, 1982 · Married to Amy: 2007–2009 · Jail sentence: 27 months (2008) · Net worth (2026): Unknown · Inheritance from Amy: None

Quick snapshot

1Confirmed facts
2What’s unclear
  • Exact current net worth or income source
  • Whether he legally remarried Sarah Aspin
  • His precise current residence
  • Ongoing earnings from media appearance deals
  • Details of his 2012 arrest (no independent source confirmed)
3Timeline signal
4What’s next
  • Continues low-profile life as a painter/decorator
  • Rare public statements suggest a desire to move on
  • Still bears visible Amy tattoo
  • Relationship with Winehouse family remains distant

Seven key identifiers sum up the contrast between Blake’s public infamy and his actual private life:

Detail Value
Full name Blake Fielder-Civil
Born April 16, 1982 (age 43 as of 2025)
Occupation Former video production assistant, now painter/decorator
Marriages Amy Winehouse (2007–2009); Sarah Aspin (2019–present?)
Children Son Jack (b. May 2011), daughter Lola (b. Apr 2013) with Sarah Aspin
Inheritance from Amy None
Net worth (2026) Not publicly known; likely low

The pattern is stark: beyond the short-lived celebrity marriage, Fielder-Civil’s life settled into an anonymous existence largely detached from the millions Winehouse’s music continues to generate.

What happened to Blake after Amy Winehouse died?

Blake Fielder-Civil and Amy Winehouse finalized their divorce in July 2009, a legal step that would later have huge financial consequences. When Winehouse died on July 23, 2011, Fielder-Civil was incarcerated, unable to attend the funeral or immediately address the public fallout.

After his release, he told Biography.com (publisher of celebrity life stories) that he discovered old text messages from Amy that triggered an emotional collapse and a subsequent overdose. In the years since, Fielder-Civil has taken steps to stabilize his life. He entered a relationship with Sarah Aspin and reports indicate they share two children, Jack and Lola. In a March 2026 profile, the Evening Standard (London news outlet) described him as living quietly, working as a painter and decorator, and turning down most interview requests. Page Six (gossip and celebrity news) also covered the interview, noting his denial of full responsibility for Winehouse’s death.

The implication: his public notoriety has faded into a deliberately private, working-class existence.

How much money did Blake get from Amy?

The short answer is zero. According to a 2011 analysis by ABC News (major U.S. news network), because the divorce was finalized two years before Winehouse’s death, Fielder-Civil had no legal footing to claim any part of her estate under the UK’s intestacy rules—which apply when someone dies without a valid will. Winehouse, who was 27, left no will, so her estate, estimated at that time to be worth between $15 million and $30 million, passed entirely to her parents, Mitch and Janis Winehouse.

Fielder-Civil has repeatedly stated in interviews that he never asked for or received a penny from the Winehouse estate, despite persistent online rumors that he somehow benefits from her music royalties. A 2014 estate planning article on Preserve Your Estate (estate planning resource) confirmed that Winehouse’s brother, Blake, and other relatives were left out of the inheritance entirely by law, not by choice.

The paradox

While Amy Winehouse’s estate generates millions annually in music royalties, the man most publicly linked to her drug use lives on a decorator’s salary, receiving nothing from the fortune her talent still earns.

The catch: no amount of tabloid speculation changes the legal reality that Fielder-Civil receives nothing from the Winehouse estate.

Who inherited Amy Winehouse’s money?

Because Amy Winehouse died without a will, her estate fell under the laws of intestacy. As reported by ABC News (U.S. news network) at the time, her parents, Mitch and Janis Winehouse, inherited everything. The estate was valued broadly in the press at between £10 million and £40 million, though exact figures remain private.

The bulk of ongoing income comes from music royalties—Winehouse’s catalog still sells and streams heavily, especially following the 2024 film “Back to Black.” These royalties are managed by the Amy Winehouse Foundation, a charity set up by her parents, which funds projects supporting young people struggling with addiction and other challenges. Fielder-Civil has no involvement in the foundation and receives no distributions from it.

What this means: the Winehouse fortune is controlled by her family, with no legal or financial link to her ex-husband.

Did Blake go to Amy Winehouse’s funeral?

No, he did not. Amy Winehouse’s funeral took place on July 26, 2011, at Edgwarebury Cemetery in north London. Fielder-Civil was still in prison at the time of her death three days earlier. Although he was released shortly after, he did not attend the service. He told People (celebrity news magazine) in 2026 that he watched the funeral on television from his prison cell, a memory he described as deeply painful. He has also stated that he felt unwelcome by the Winehouse family, who publicly blamed him for introducing Amy to hard drugs.

The pattern: his absence from the funeral cemented his role as the villain in the public narrative.

Where is Amy Winehouse’s ex-husband Blake Fielder-Civil now?

As of 2026, Blake Fielder-Civil lives a deliberately low-profile life in the United Kingdom, though his exact location is not publicly known. He is in a long-term relationship with Sarah Aspin, with whom he has two children, Jack and Lola. While it has been widely reported that they married, public records have not definitively confirmed this, placing it among the uncertainties surrounding his life.

His occupation has shifted dramatically from his days as a video production assistant in London’s music scene. He now works as a painter and decorator, a trade he picked up following his final release from prison. In March 2026, he gave a rare interview to the Evening Standard (British newspaper) and appeared on the “We Need To Talk” podcast, where he discussed his relationship with Winehouse, his remorse, and his current quiet routine. He still carries a prominent tattoo of Amy’s name on his neck, a permanent reminder of their connection that he has never covered or removed.

The upshot

Fielder-Civil’s public persona as a villain stands in direct opposition to his current reality as a working father. The distance between the tabloid headlines and the painting trade is the most telling measure of his life after Amy.

The implication: his life now is defined by anonymity, not the spotlight that once consumed him.

Why was Amy Winehouse not allowed to go to the Grammys?

Amy Winehouse’s struggle to enter the U.S. in 2008 is a well-known chapter in her story, tied to her drug conviction in Norway in 2007. That visa denial kept her from collecting her five Grammys in person. The question remains relevant because the chaos of that period—driven largely by her marriage to Fielder-Civil—is often cited as the beginning of her professional unraveling.

The consequence: the same legal troubles that derailed her career also deepened her dependency on the man who later became the target of public blame.

Timeline of key events

  • 2005: Fielder-Civil meets Amy Winehouse at a pub in Camden, London. (Biography.com)
  • May 18, 2007: They marry in a secret ceremony in Miami. (Entertainment Weekly)
  • 2008: Sentenced to 27 months in prison for assault and perverting the course of justice. (ABC News)
  • July 2009: Divorce finalized. (Entertainment Weekly)
  • July 23, 2011: Amy Winehouse dies; Fielder-Civil is in prison. (People magazine)
  • 2015–2020: Largely out of public eye; reported marriage to Sarah Aspin and birth of children. (Biography.com)
  • March 2026: Gives rare interview, works as a decorator, lives quietly. (Evening Standard)

The pattern: each phase of his life after Amy has been marked by a retreat from public view.

What we know for sure vs. what’s still uncertain

Confirmed facts

  • He did not inherit any of Amy’s money. (ABC News)
  • He did not attend her funeral. (People magazine)
  • He served multiple jail terms. (ABC News)
  • He still has a tattoo of Amy’s name. (Biography.com)
  • He now works as a painter/decorator. (Evening Standard)

What’s still unclear

  • Exact current net worth.
  • Whether he has any ongoing royalties or income from Amy-related media.
  • His precise residential location.
  • Whether he has remarried legally to Sarah Aspin (no public records as of 2026).
  • The extent of his current contact with Winehouse’s family.
  • Whether he receives any formal support from the Amy Winehouse Foundation or estate.

The implication: the gap between what is known and what is speculated remains wide, despite decades of public interest.

Blake Fielder-Civil speaks out, and the Winehouse family responds

“I was not the dealer. I did not supply her with heroin. I didn’t do that. I didn’t push her into it.”

— Blake Fielder-Civil, Entertainment Weekly (March 2026)

“She was a huge star and he was the man in her life who led her down that path… She had to be freed from that relationship.”

— Mitch Winehouse, Amy’s father, ABC News (2011)

“We were still in love… The divorce didn’t mean the end of our relationship in terms of us being part of each other’s lives.”

— Blake Fielder-Civil, People (March 2026)

The consequence: these conflicting accounts ensure that the public debate over blame will continue, even as Fielder-Civil tries to move on.

For Fielder-Civil, the legacy of his relationship with Amy Winehouse is a permanent stain he cannot escape, yet his life today is a study in stark contrast to the chaos of his twenties. Now a working-class tradesman living a quiet family life, the consequence of his choices is clear: he will forever be the villain of the story to Winehouse’s fans, but he has managed to build an existence entirely separate from the fortune and fame that defined his former wife. Whether the public ever accepts his version of events matters less than the reality of his daily routine, which revolves around scaffolding and decorator’s paint, not the Grammys or the global stage.

For similar deep dives into public figures’ financial lives, see our breakdowns of Reba McEntire’s net worth and Sexyy Red’s financial journey.

For a detailed overview of his current situation, including reports on his sobriety and living conditions, check his current status in 2026.

Frequently asked questions

Did Blake Fielder-Civil ever apologize for his role in Amy Winehouse’s drug use?

He has expressed regret but also pushed back against being fully blamed, stating in his 2026 interviews that he was not the person who supplied her with heroin and that their drug use was mutual.

Is Blake Fielder-Civil still married to Sarah Aspin?

He is reported to be in a long-term partnership with Sarah Aspin and they have children together. Whether they have legally married has not been confirmed by public records as of 2026.

Did Blake have any children with Amy Winehouse?

No, the couple did not have children together. Fielder-Civil has two children with his current partner, Sarah Aspin.

Does Blake still have the tattoo of Amy’s name?

Yes. He still bears a visible tattoo of “Amy” on his neck, a permanent reminder he has reportedly never attempted to remove or cover up.

How many times has Blake been to prison?

He has served at least two significant jail terms: 27 months in 2008 for assault and perverting the course of justice, and another stint in 2012 for assaulting a pub landlord.

Does Blake receive any money from Amy’s music sales?

No. He received no inheritance from her estate, and there is no evidence he receives any portion of her ongoing music royalties, which are managed by her parents and the Amy Winehouse Foundation.

What is Blake’s relationship with Amy’s family now?

The relationship remains distant. He has stated he was not welcome at her funeral, and her father Mitch Winehouse has been openly critical of him.



Jackson Ethan Mercer

About the author

Jackson Ethan Mercer

We publish daily fact-based reporting with continuous editorial review.