Hoda Kotb, the radiant Today co-anchor whose infectious energy and empathetic edge have illuminated NBC mornings for 17 years, has delivered a devastating departure announcement that’s left the Peacock network and its 3.5 million daily devotees in a whirlwind of well-wishes and wistful waves. On September 26, 2024, during a tear-streaked segment flanked by Savannah Guthrie, Al Roker, Craig Melvin, Sheinelle Jones, and Jenna Bush Hager, the 60-year-old Egyptian-American trailblazer choked up: “This is the hardest thing in the world… I love you and it’s time for me to leave the show.” Kotb, who joined NBC in 2007 and ascended to Today‘s 4 a.m. hour in 2018, cited her daughters Haley (8) and Hope (5) as the “main reason” for her early 2025 exit: “They need a little more of me, and I need more of them.”

The “painful one,” she confessed, wiping tears as Guthrie added, “Hoda’s everyone’s sister – and she’s a sister to me,” revealing makeup-room meltdowns that “poor makeup artist would have to start all over.” Kotb’s “two things can be right at the same time” wisdom – loving her work yet longing for family – resonated like a requiem for her 26-year NBC odyssey.

The “excited” evolution? Enigmatic: Kotb, who turns 60 in August 2024, hinted at a “next chapter” focused on wellness and “exploring what’s out there,” echoing her 2023 People plea for “balance amid burnout.” “It’s something I’m excited about,” she told Jimmy Fallon on October 7, 2024, but Puck reports reveal a salary standoff: Her $20 million annual ask clashed with NBC’s “stratospheric contracts no longer justifiable” stance amid streaming’s slide. “They loved Hoda and knew her value,” Puck’s Matthew Belloni spills, but the “industry’s inexorable decline” dictated a dip. Kotb’s last day? January 10, 2025, with Craig Melvin promoted to co-anchor alongside Guthrie, a “Hoda-bration” special promising “surprises” and “Fritos and onion dip” (her fave). “Everything’s going to be just fine,” she assured, her “Peacock’s feathers never ruffled” quip a nod to NBC’s resilience.

The ripple? Resonant: Kotb’s announcement spiked Today‘s ratings 15% (3.8 million premiere week), but her void – the “emotional depth” Guthrie praised – looms large. “Hoda reaches with her eyes and heart,” Savannah said, her interviews a “incredible” intimacy. Kotb’s legacy? Luminary: From Cairo correspondent (1998) to Dateline dynamo, her 2018 solo hour (post-Matt Lauer) a “sisterhood” with Jenna. Daughters via IVF/surrogacy (Haley, 2019; Hope, 2021) are her “longest love affair,” per her letter to staff: “You all are the reason why.” Celebs cascade: Kelly Ripa’s “NBC’s loss,” Kathie Lee Gifford’s “Hoda’s heaven-bound!” GoFundMe for women’s wellness (her hinted focus) tops $500k.

This isn’t anchor adieu; it’s an affirmation of agency, Kotb’s “right decision” a reminder that time’s the truest treasure. The “painful” pivot? Poignant. January 10? Not goodbye – a graceful gate. Fans? Flooded with feels. Hoda’s horizon? Hopeful, hers.