Now firmly in her thirties, the supermodel opens up about craving independence, cherishing freedom, and why building a family is still somewhere on the horizon — just not yet.
Kendall Jenner has never been one to follow a predetermined script, and her thoughts on starting a family are no different. As the 30-year-old model and entrepreneur settles deeper into a new decade, she’s embracing a more intentional approach to life — one where motherhood figures into the picture, but on her own timetable.
In a wide-ranging conversation with Vogue France, Jenner addressed the question that seems to follow every high-profile woman past a certain age: What about children? Her answer, refreshingly direct, was both candid and considered. She wants kids. Just not right now.
Kendall on Motherhood: Wanting It, But Not Yet
When the magazine posed the question of whether turning 30 had shifted her thinking around having children, Jenner was unequivocal. She expressed a genuine desire for motherhood — alongside an equally genuine awareness that the timing simply isn’t right. Her reasoning wasn’t rooted in ambivalence, but in something far more grounded: commitment. She wants to give her children not just her name and resources, but her time — and for the moment, she said, that time isn’t fully available.
It’s a sentiment that resonates well beyond celebrity circles. Many women in their late twenties and early thirties find themselves in exactly this position: wanting a family in the abstract while acknowledging that the present moment, with all its demands and possibilities, doesn’t quite accommodate that vision yet.
Lessons From Her Twenties, Applied to Her Thirties
The Vogue France interview also gave Jenner space to reflect on her twenties — a decade she described as stressful and overly frenetic. She recalled how easy it was, at 20, to be perpetually in motion without any real sense of direction or self. Older people in her life, she noted, often told her the same thing: slow down, don’t take everything so seriously, enjoy it more.
She now intends to live that advice out loud. Turning 30, for Jenner, wasn’t a crisis — it was a recalibration. Her stated goal for the year ahead is deceptively simple: stay true to herself and actually enjoy the ride. She acknowledges that it might sound like a worn-out phrase, but insists the sentiment is anything but hollow. After years of running toward something without always knowing what it was, she’s choosing stillness, intention, and authenticity.
The Freedom She Isn’t Willing to Give Up
Jenner’s perspective on independence isn’t a new development. Earlier this year, appearing on the podcast In Your Dreams alongside host Owen Thiele, she spoke at length about how deeply she values solitude and autonomy. She’s not just someone who tolerates being alone — she actively seeks it out, regularly taking solo trips and relishing in the unscheduled, uncomplicated time that comes with answering to no one but herself.
She made clear that her love of independence isn’t a rejection of partnership or family life. She wants a husband — she said as much. But she’s also deeply aware that the particular brand of freedom she currently enjoys, the kind that allows her to chart her own course on any given day, is something she’s not quite ready to trade in. Not yet, anyway.
A New Kind of Kendall for a New Decade
What’s striking about Jenner’s recent public reflections is their consistency and clarity. Whether she’s speaking to a French fashion magazine or appearing on a podcast with a much more casual register, her message remains the same: she’s exactly where she wants to be, and she’s done apologizing for it.
That kind of self-assurance is, by her own admission, something she had to grow into. The version of Kendall Jenner who debuted on reality television as a teenager, who was swept up in the whirlwind of her family’s fame and the relentless machinery of the fashion industry, is a very different person from the one speaking now. She’s still ambitious, still deeply embedded in the worlds of modeling and business — but she’s doing it on her terms, with her eyes open.
For Jenner, thirty isn’t a deadline. It’s a starting point. The kids, the partnership, the next chapter — she’s not dismissing any of it. She’s simply insisting on doing it right, when the time and her heart are ready. In a culture that’s still far too eager to script women’s timelines for them, that kind of patience reads less like hesitation and more like wisdom.
Source: ELLE US

