Njambi Fever’s husband’s cheating scandal in 2025 has blown up Kenya’s social media feeds after explosive WhatsApp screenshots leaked showing the blogger’s spouse allegedly sending cash to a mystery woman amid steamy exchanges.
The digital firestorm kicked off on November 4 when anonymous posts on X and Instagram dumped chat logs purportedly from Njambi’s hubby, a low-key entrepreneur named Kevin, flirting with an unidentified lady and wiring her KSh 1,000 as a “quick treat” before topping up KSh 2,000 days later.
Njambi, the sassy content creator behind the “Fever” brand with 450,000 Instagram followers, broke her silence in a raw TikTok live that racked up 200,000 views overnight, laughing off the drama with her signature wit: “If KSh 1,000 is the price of peace, my man must be shopping at the discount aisle. We’re good, fam, but sis, upgrade your worth next time.”
The leaks paint a messy picture straight out of Njambi’s own scandal exposés. Screenshots, watermarked with heart emojis and eggplant icons, show Kevin responding to the woman’s pleas for “something small” with affectionate banter like “You’re my secret vibe, babe” before the M-Pesa ping.
The recipient, whose profile pic shows a braided beauty in a sundress, allegedly pushed for more, prompting the follow-up transfer.
TUKO News first amplified the story, verifying the chats through metadata that ties them to Kevin’s verified number, though neither party has confirmed authenticity beyond Njambi’s quippy rebuttal.
This isn’t Njambi’s first brush with bedroom betrayals; she’s built a career spilling tea on celeb infidelities, from Mulamwah’s Ruth K. fallout to shadowy A-lister hookups, often with receipts that go viral.
“I expose others’ mess, but mine? That’s private comedy gold,” she joked in her stream, flashing a mock crown filter while sipping tea from a mug labelled “Queen of Clapbacks”.
Influencer Celinna Murraini commented, “Sis turned lemons into a lemonade stand. That’s boss energy.”
But trolls piled on, with one fan snarking, “From spilling tea to sipping it. Karma’s got a KSh 1,000 receipt.”

Instagram reels mocked the paltry payout, overlaying the transfer alert with audio from Njambi’s hit “Broke Boys” track: “KSh 1,000? Even my ex did better with vibes alone.”
Njambi and Kevin tied the knot in a low-key 2023 ceremony in Naivasha, after a whirlwind courtship that she chronicled in vlogs blending humour and heart.
The couple, parents to a bubbly two-year-old daughter, often shared couple goals snaps from date nights at Java House or weekend getaways to Diani.
Kevin, who runs a small logistics firm in the Industrial Area, stayed out of the spotlight until now; his LinkedIn profile suddenly swarmed with sleuths.
Insiders whisper the affair brewed during Njambi’s heavy travel schedule for brand collabs, a common pitfall in influencer marriages where spotlights shine unevenly.
“Long hours, lonely nights – it happens. But communication is key, and they seem to be talking it out,” shared a mutual friend anonymously to Mpasho, hinting at counselling sessions already underway.
This tempest taps into a larger conversation on fidelity in Kenya’s creator economy, where public personas clash with private pains.
Just last month, Njambi’s dating series on TikTok sparked rows over “Are We Dating the Same Man” group chats exposing serial cheaters in Nairobi’s upscale spots like The Alchemist.
Her own saga flips the script, humanising the tea-spiller as vulnerable too. “I’ve always said, no one’s above the mess. This just proves it,” Njambi reflected in a follow-up post, linking to a Patreon for “real talk” sessions on relationships.
As the dust settles, Njambi’s trending status soars, with podcast invites from Switch TV and a potential book deal floating.
Kevin, spotted picking up groceries solo in Buruburu, dodged questions with a sheepish wave. Will this KSh 1,000 footnote fracture their fairy tale or forge a fiercer bond?















