For months, the narrative around Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce felt almost too perfect.

A high-profile romance.
A summer wedding on the horizon.
Two global careers finally slowing down just enough to make room for something personal.
Now, that calm is being tested — not by the couple themselves, but by events unfolding well outside their control.
According to reports attributed to sources close to the situation, Kelce has growing concerns that their wedding plans could be disrupted by an unexpected factor: a courtroom.

The issue stems from the ongoing legal battle involving Swift’s former close friend Blake Lively and It Ends With Us director Justin Baldoni. Lively has accused Baldoni of sexual harassment and of orchestrating a smear campaign against her — allegations that have placed the case firmly in the public eye.
Last week, unsealed court documents revealed private text messages from 2024 between Swift and Lively. In them, the two discussed Baldoni in blunt, emotional language. What was once private venting has now become part of the public record — and potentially part of a trial.
That’s where the unease begins.
According to TMZ, Swift could be called as a hostile witness for the defense if the case proceeds to trial, which is currently expected to begin in mid-May.

The timing is uncomfortable. Reports suggest Swift and Kelce’s wedding is planned for mid-June in Rhode Island — leaving a narrow window between a potential courtroom appearance and their long-anticipated ceremony.
Insiders claim Kelce has been urging Swift to create distance from the situation and set firmer boundaries, feeling uneasy about how closely her name has become tied to a legal fight she never sought out. Those close to the couple describe him as supportive — but increasingly anxious.
The word being used is “stressed.”

Kelce, who is already navigating uncertainty about what may be the final chapter of his NFL career, reportedly fears the possibility that Swift could be compelled to appear in court just weeks before the wedding. Not because of guilt or wrongdoing — but because of visibility, timing, and emotional toll.
For a couple that has gone to great lengths to protect their private moments, the idea of a legal obligation interfering with such a personal milestone feels deeply unfair to him.
Sources suggest this anxiety has begun to ripple through their inner circle. Family members, including Kelce’s parents and brother Jason, are said to be offering reassurance — reminding him to take things one step at a time and not let hypotheticals overshadow what’s been planned.
Still, the tension is real.

Swift and Lively, once frequently seen together, have not appeared publicly since late 2024. Reports indicate their friendship has cooled, with the unsealed texts revealing Swift’s discomfort over how their communication had changed — becoming colder, more corporate, less personal.
None of this suggests the wedding is canceled. Not officially. Not yet.
But the situation has introduced something that wasn’t there before: uncertainty.
In the world Swift and Kelce occupy, timing is everything. Tours are scheduled years in advance. NFL seasons run on unforgiving calendars. And court proceedings do not bend easily around personal milestones — no matter how famous the names involved.
Right now, nothing has been decided.
No subpoena has been confirmed.
No wedding plans have been formally altered.
But the possibility alone has shifted the emotional landscape.

What was once a straight path toward celebration now includes a quiet question mark — one that neither of them asked for, and neither can fully control.
And as the legal process inches closer, the couple finds themselves doing what they’ve done all along: keeping their heads down, leaning on family, and hoping that the most important day of their lives doesn’t get caught in someone else’s storm.
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