There was a moment when it looked as though Ant McPartlin might lose everything.
His career.
His reputation.
And possibly the partnership that had defined British television for more than three decades.
But now, years after the drink-driving scandal that rocked the nation in 2018, his closest ally Declan Donnelly says Ant didnât just survive the fall â he changed for the better.
âWhat I most admire,â Dec said, âis that Ant took responsibility and real action. He worked on himself so much â not just to get back to being himself, but to become a much better person than he was before.â
 The Night That Nearly Ended It All
In 2018, Antâs world unravelled in public. He was arrested near his London home after crashing his car while twice the legal alcohol limit, colliding with multiple vehicles after walking his dogs near Richmond Park.
The incident left a four-year-old child needing hospital treatment and resulted in a record ÂŁ86,000 fine â believed to be the highest ever handed down by a British court for drink-driving.

Declan Donnelly has said that his close friend Ant McPartlin is now a âmuch better person than he was beforeâ â after his drink-driving ordeal in 2018

Antâs career appeared to be in tatters when he was arrested for drink-driving close to his London home
At the time, Ant was already battling painkiller addiction and the breakdown of his marriage to Lisa Armstrong. ITV even cancelled Saturday Night Takeaway so he could enter residential rehabilitation for a second time.
To many, it looked like the end.
 âHe Took Responsibility â Properlyâ
But speaking candidly in The Times, Dec revealed what happened next wasnât a PR comeback â it was a personal reckoning.
Ant didnât deflect blame.
He didnât hide behind excuses.
He stepped back, faced himself, and did the work.
And according to Dec, that decision changed everything.
 Turning 50, Turning a Corner
Ant himself has admitted his early forties were the toughest years of his life.
âTurning 50 was great,â he said.
âMy early forties were really hard. These last few years? Itâs the happiest Iâve been in a long, long time.â
For a man once defined by chaos and crisis, the words landed with quiet power.
 Still Learning â Even Under Fire
Even now, Ant and Dec havenât escaped controversy. Just weeks ago, the duo were forced to remove a podcast promo clip after fans criticised its imagery as triggering and insensitive.
They apologised quickly, deleted the video, and acknowledged the feedback â a response that many felt showed how much theyâve learned since earlier mistakes.
Mental-health advocates were still vocal, but the contrast to past missteps was clear: accountability came first.
 Still ITVâs Golden Duo
Despite everything, Ant and Dec remain two of the most trusted faces on British television, fronting juggernauts like Iâm A Celebrity⊠Get Me Out of Here!, Britainâs Got Talent and Limitless Win.
Theyâve recently secured a reported £30 million ITV deal, keeping them on screen until at least 2028 â a testament to public forgiveness, but also to genuine change.
 Not a Comeback â A Rebuild
Decâs words donât paint Ant as a man who simply bounced back.
They describe someone who broke, reflected, and rebuilt himself piece by piece.
In an industry obsessed with image, Ant McPartlinâs story has become something rarer â a reminder that growth doesnât always look glamorous, but it can be real.
And sometimes, as his best friend puts it, the hardest fall produces a better version of the person who stands back up.



