Kristin Cavallari’s 9-Year-Old Daughter Is Already Planning Her Jewelry Empire Takeover

Kristin Cavallari’s 9-Year-Old Daughter Is Already Planning Her Jewelry Empire Takeover

Kristin Cavallari’s daughter Saylor isn’t waiting until she’s grown up to chase her dreams — she’s already telling the whole school she’s taking over the family business. During a recent episode of her Let’s Be Honest podcast, Kristin shared that her 9-year-old daughter has big plans for the future, and they include running Uncommon James, Kristin’s popular jewelry brand. 

“She’s been telling everybody,” Kristin revealed. “I think the whole school knows about it.”

Apparently, when Kristin’s latest collection dropped, Saylor gathered her little friends, handed out pieces like a mini-mogul, and fully embraced her inner CEO. “And it’s just been really fun for me to see how excited she is about this and to be able to do this,” she said. “She has all the plans to take over Uncommon James one day, and I honestly do feel like she probably will because she is very into it for being nine years old. So this is just a proud mom moment.”

Kristin, who shares Saylor, 10-year-old Jaxon, and 12-year-old Camden with her ex-husband Jay Cutler, recently posted rare family snaps showing all three kids outdoors. In the photos, her two youngest are cuddling with the family dogs, while the siblings stand together smiling in the golden evening light. She captioned it simply: “My favorite nights.”

Saylor might be Kristin’s business-minded mini-me, but she’s also got her mom’s strong-willed spirit. At a live Let’s Be Honest taping in New York this March, Kristin was asked what advice she’d give her daughter when she starts dating.

Her answer? Confidence and boundaries. “Saylor doesn’t need advice. She’s gonna be just fine,” Kristin said. “That girl is tough… literally my mini-me.”

Kristin went on to say it’s less about boys and more about self-worth. “Dating advice for Saylor: really listen to your gut,” she advised, adding, “I think sometimes, especially when we’re younger, we ignore red flags. We put up with s— that we shouldn’t put up with.”

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