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Briana DeJesus Net Worth: The Day Job, the Beauty Salon, and the Lawsuit She Won

Briana DeJesus’ net worth is estimated at $500,000 — a figure cited consistently by Celebrity Net Worth and aligned with the mainstream industry consensus, making it one of the cleanest estimates in the Teen Mom franchise with no significant divergence between sources to navigate. What the $500,000 figure reflects is more unusual than the number itself: it is the accumulated result of a career built across three income layers simultaneously. She has said on multiple occasions that she needed to maintain a corporate job to pay her bills even while filming Teen Mom. She is a co-owner of a beauty salon in Orlando specialising in lash extensions and eyebrow services. And she is an MTV cast member — one who earns a lower per-season rate than the franchise’s original cast, and who has been transparent about what that actually means for day-to-day financial reality.

The $500,000 figure is consistent with the estimate in Worthoria’s Richest Teen Mom Stars Ranked article. It is the net position of someone who has worked harder across more income streams than most of her co-stars, at a lower television salary, in a market — Orlando, Florida — where the cost of living is manageable rather than punishing.

Briana DeJesus Net Worth at a Glance

Category Detail
Estimated Net Worth ~$500,000 (Celebrity Net Worth; consistent with multiple industry sources 2024–2026)
MTV salary Reportedly ~$100,000 per season (initial joining rate, per The Things); higher in later seasons per franchise pay scale; lower than original Teen Mom 2 cast (~$300,000+)
Aries Beauty Salon Co-owner, Orlando, Florida; specialises in eyelash extensions and eyebrow services; ongoing income
Corporate/timeshare job Self-disclosed on social media — maintained employment in the timeshare industry alongside MTV work to pay bills
Kailyn Lowry lawsuit outcome Kailyn sued Briana for defamation (June 2021); case dismissed (Briana won); Kailyn ordered to pay Briana’s legal fees (~$100,000–$120,000); Kailyn stated she spent $200,000 total pursuing the lawsuit
Known For 16 and Pregnant Season 3 (2012); Teen Mom 3 (2013, cancelled); Teen Mom 2 (Season 8, 2018 onwards); Teen Mom: The Next Chapter; DeJesus family (mother Roxanne, sister Brittany); Kailyn Lowry rivalry; Nova and Stella
Born May 21, 1994, Orlando, Florida
Children Nova Star DeJesus (born September 10, 2011, with Devoin Austin); Stella Star DeJesus (born July 2, 2017, with Luis Hernandez)
Family Mother: Roxanne DeJesus (constant presence on the show); sister: Brittany DeJesus (also appears regularly); father left family when Briana was approx. 3; never discussed publicly
Partner Engaged to tattoo artist Javi Gonzalez (as of May 2021); status as of 2026 not confirmed
Last Updated May 7, 2026
Estimate Type Estimated
Confidence Level Medium
Note $500,000 per Celebrity Net Worth; consistent across multiple sources. No major CNW-vs-mainstream discrepancy — the most straightforward net worth estimate in the cluster. MTV salary varies by source: $100,000 per season is the earliest cited figure for her joining rate; per-episode rates for the broader cast at her tenure stage may be higher.

Background: Orlando, a Father Who Left, and a Family That Stayed

Briana DeJesus was born on May 21, 1994, in Orlando, Florida, the second daughter of Roxanne DeJesus. Her father left the family when she was approximately three years old; she has not discussed him publicly, and he has not been part of the documented narrative of her life across more than a decade of television. The family unit that shaped her is the one that remained: her mother Roxanne and her sister Brittany, both of whom have appeared so frequently on Teen Mom that they are effectively co-cast members in the audience’s understanding of her storyline.

Roxanne DeJesus is one of the most recognisable supporting figures in the franchise — vocally protective of her daughters, openly opinionated about the men in their lives, and consistently present at every significant moment documented on camera. Brittany DeJesus, similarly, has been central to multiple storylines, including the documentation of her own decision not to continue a pregnancy — a choice she made while Briana was pregnant with Nova, and which was handled on the show with the kind of factual directness that made that particular season of 16 and Pregnant notable. The three-generational DeJesus household — Roxanne, Brittany, Briana, and eventually Nova and Stella — is one of the franchise’s most distinctive family configurations.

Briana graduated from high school in 2012 and did not pursue college. Her path from that point was shaped first by motherhood — Nova was born in September 2011, before her high school graduation — and then by the television opportunity that her 16 and Pregnant appearance created.

From Teen Mom 3 to Teen Mom 2: A Career With an Unusual Interruption

In 2012, Briana appeared on Season 3 of 16 and Pregnant. In 2013, she was cast in Teen Mom 3, the franchise’s second spinoff, alongside MacKenzie McKee, Alexandria Sekella, and Katie Yeager. The show had one season before it was cancelled due to significantly lower ratings than its predecessors. The cancellation left Briana without a platform or an income stream from MTV for several years — a period during which she worked jobs outside of entertainment and maintained her family financially through employment in the timeshare industry, among other positions.

The Teen Mom 3 cancellation is financially relevant in a way that tends to get overlooked in her coverage: she experienced the end of a reality television career once already, at 19, and navigated the return to conventional employment that her original cast co-stars have not had to reckon with at the same career stage. That experience shaped the practical financial orientation she has described publicly — maintaining a day job, owning a business, not treating MTV income as the sole financial foundation — in ways that her higher-earning co-stars, who never went through a similar disruption, may not have needed to develop.

She joined Teen Mom 2 in Season 8 in 2018, filling the space created by the expansion and evolution of that franchise’s cast. As a newer addition rather than an original cast member, her per-season compensation was reportedly lower — approximately $100,000 in her initial seasons, compared to original cast members who reportedly earned $300,000 or more per season at their peak. The pay gap is not incidental: it is the structural fact that explains why she maintained other employment simultaneously and why the $500,000 net worth reflects a career built with less television income than many of her co-stars accumulated.

The Day Job, the Salon, and the Self-Reliance

Briana has said on multiple occasions — in social media posts and on the show itself — that her MTV income is not sufficient to cover all of her expenses, and that she has maintained corporate employment alongside filming. The industry she mentioned was the timeshare market, which in Orlando — one of the global centres of timeshare sales — is a legitimate and reasonably well-compensated sector. The combination of MTV income and a salaried corporate position represents a level of financial self-awareness that is, within the franchise, unusual.

She is also a co-owner of Aries Beauty Salon in Orlando, which specialises in eyelash extensions and eyebrow services — the same beauty category that Catelynn Baltierra briefly pursued through her Baltierra Beauty Bar, though with greater apparent commercial staying power in Briana’s case. The salon represents a small business investment with ongoing returns: regular clients, employee management, and the operational responsibilities of running a service business alongside a television career. It also represents the specific professional identity in beauty services that the franchise has documented as her interest since early seasons.

The multi-layered income approach — MTV, corporate job, beauty salon ownership, social media brand deals — is the financial model that produced the $500,000 net worth from a television salary base lower than the franchise’s original cast earns. It is a model built on diversification rather than on a single large income source, and it is the most practically grounded financial structure of any cast member in the current franchise.

“I messed around with somebody’s ex-husband, I get it, you hate me for that. I was the fifth girl added to Teen Mom 2, and some people didn’t like the fact that I was taking away TV time from others, but that’s not the point.” — Briana DeJesus, Instagram Live, 2021

The Kailyn Lowry Defamation Lawsuit: What It Cost and What It Paid

In June 2021, Kailyn Lowry filed a defamation lawsuit against Briana in Florida, alleging that Briana had publicly stated that Kailyn had physically beaten her ex-boyfriend Chris Lopez and broken into Lopez’s mother’s home. The claims stemmed from a September 2020 incident in which Lopez reported to police that Kailyn had punched him; charges against Kailyn were dropped by February 2021. Briana had commented on the incident publicly and on social media.

Briana and her legal team, led by attorney Marc Randazza, filed an Anti-SLAPP motion — a legal mechanism designed to dismiss lawsuits that target protected speech — arguing that Kailyn’s complaint was “meritless and directed exclusively at protected speech on a matter of public concern brought for the purpose of harassing and trying to silence a critic.” The case was dismissed by the judge. Kailyn was ordered to pay Briana’s legal fees as part of the dismissal.

The financial accounting of the lawsuit is documented from both sides. Briana stated on the Teen Mom: The Next Chapter premiere that her own legal fees ran to approximately $100,000. The Sun subsequently reported her total legal fees as over $120,000. Kailyn disclosed on her podcast Barely Famous that she had spent $200,000 pursuing the lawsuit and was required to pay Briana $100,000 by June 1 of the following year. Kailyn also described paying approximately $200,000 in total, inclusive of her own attorney costs and the fee award to Briana.

For Briana, the financial outcome was essentially fee recovery: she spent approximately $100,000–$120,000 on legal defence and recovered those costs through the court-ordered fee award. The lawsuit was not a source of net financial gain beyond the recovery of what she had spent. But it eliminated the net legal cost of defending herself — which, for a cast member at her income level, is meaningful. She celebrated the dismissal with a victory party featuring “Case Closed” balloons, a cookie iced with “Bye Hoe,” and a tattoo artist providing on-site services — with Jenelle Evans among those who attended and received a dollar-sign tattoo to mark the occasion.

Devoin Austin, Luis Hernandez, and Co-Parenting Across Two Families

Nova’s father, Devoin Austin, has been a recurring and often contentious presence in Briana’s Teen Mom storyline. His on-and-off involvement with Nova, the financial contributions he made or did not make to her upbringing, and the complicated dynamic between him, Briana, and the broader DeJesus family have been documented across multiple seasons with the kind of sustained specificity that the show’s format allows. He has pursued a music career. The co-parenting relationship has, by the most recent available reporting, reached a more stable if not conflict-free equilibrium.

Stella’s father, Luis Hernandez, was not significantly involved in Stella’s life following her birth in July 2017. The pattern of two children with two absent or inconsistently present fathers — managed by Briana alongside her mother and sister — is the practical family configuration that the show has documented and that defines the household’s daily reality. No child support arrangements involving either father have been publicly quantified in available sources.

Briana’s decision to date Javi Marroquin — Kailyn Lowry’s ex-husband — from October 2017 to February 2018 is documented and is part of why the Kailyn rivalry reached the level of public hostility that it did. Briana has addressed this directly and unapologetically in her own words. The relationship ended after a few months; the Kailyn rivalry outlasted it by years and eventually produced the lawsuit.

The DeJesus Family as Financial Infrastructure

One element of Briana’s financial story that receives less coverage than the lawsuit or the MTV salary is the specific support structure her family provides. Roxanne DeJesus and Brittany DeJesus form a genuine support network — childcare, household management, emotional infrastructure — that meaningfully reduces the operational cost of being a single working mother to two daughters while simultaneously maintaining three income streams. The economic value of having reliable family support for childcare in a city where childcare costs are significant is not easily quantified but is practically real.

The DeJesus household is tightly knit in the literal sense: family members live in close proximity, participate in each other’s daily lives, and have navigated — publicly, on camera — the full range of difficult decisions that young families face. That cohesion is not only emotionally meaningful. It is financially enabling in a way that several of her co-stars, who do not have the same depth of family support nearby, do not have access to.

What Briana DeJesus’ Financial Story Tells Us

Briana DeJesus’ $500,000 net worth is the result of a career that has required more work per dollar earned than most of her franchise co-stars. She joined Teen Mom at a lower per-episode rate. She experienced the cancellation of her first franchise and built her finances back through conventional employment during the gap. She maintained a day job alongside MTV filming. She co-owns a business. She won a lawsuit that cost her nothing after fee recovery. She has raised two daughters in Orlando with the support of her mother and sister and without meaningful financial contributions from either father.

The $500,000 is a modest figure by the standards of the franchise’s higher earners. It is not a modest figure by the standards of what it took to accumulate it. At 31, still filming, still co-owning the salon, still working in beauty services, and with the franchise income continuing, the $500,000 is where she is. The practical financial orientation she has demonstrated throughout her career suggests it will not be where she stays.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Briana DeJesus’ net worth in 2026?

Briana DeJesus’ net worth is estimated at approximately $500,000 in 2026, per Celebrity Net Worth — consistent with multiple industry sources and with Worthoria’s Teen Mom rankings. Unlike several other franchise cast members whose CNW figure diverges significantly from mainstream estimates, the $500,000 figure is stable across credible sources. Her income comes from Teen Mom: The Next Chapter, co-ownership of Aries Beauty Salon in Orlando, corporate employment in the timeshare industry that she has maintained alongside MTV work, and social media brand deals.

What happened with Briana DeJesus and Kailyn Lowry’s lawsuit?

In June 2021, Kailyn Lowry filed a defamation lawsuit against Briana in Florida, claiming Briana had publicly stated that Kailyn had physically beaten her ex Chris Lopez and broken into his mother’s home. Briana’s legal team filed an Anti-SLAPP motion arguing the lawsuit targeted protected speech. The judge dismissed the case — a win for Briana. As part of the dismissal, Kailyn was ordered to pay Briana’s legal fees, which totalled approximately $100,000–$120,000. Kailyn disclosed on her podcast that she spent approximately $200,000 total pursuing the lawsuit.

Why did Briana DeJesus keep a day job while on Teen Mom?

Briana has said on multiple occasions that her MTV income is not sufficient to cover all of her living expenses, and that she has maintained employment outside of television — particularly in the timeshare industry, which is a significant employer in the Orlando market. As a cast member who joined Teen Mom 2 in Season 8 rather than as an original cast member, her per-season compensation was reportedly lower than the franchise’s founding cast, who earned $300,000 or more per season at peak. Briana joined at approximately $100,000 per season initially. The day job has been her practical acknowledgment of that gap.

What is Aries Beauty Salon?

Aries Beauty Salon is a beauty business in Orlando, Florida, of which Briana DeJesus is a co-owner. The salon specialises in eyelash extensions and eyebrow services — a beauty category Briana has been associated with across her Teen Mom storylines. As a co-owner rather than a franchisee or employee, she holds equity in the business and participates in its profits and management. The salon represents one of the more durable business ventures in the franchise, with ongoing operation documented across multiple years.

Who are Briana DeJesus’ children’s fathers?

Briana’s older daughter Nova Star DeJesus (born September 10, 2011) was fathered by Devoin Austin, whose on-and-off involvement with Nova has been extensively documented on Teen Mom. Her younger daughter Stella Star DeJesus (born July 2, 2017) was fathered by Luis Hernandez, who was not significantly involved in Stella’s life after her birth. Briana has raised both daughters primarily with the support of her mother Roxanne and sister Brittany DeJesus, who are constant presences in her and her daughters’ lives.

All net worth figures are estimates based on publicly reported sources. Briana DeJesus has not publicly confirmed a specific net worth. MTV salary figures are per industry reports and vary significantly by source and season. Lawsuit financial figures are per Kailyn Lowry’s podcast disclosures and The Sun court document reporting.

image source: eonline.com

Jean Sakamoto is the creator of Worthoria, a celebrity net worth site focused on clear, engaging articles about famous figures, their careers, income sources, and the stories behind how they built their wealth.