Charlotte Flair has shared some insight into what she hopes to do once her WWE career eventually comes to an end.
The 39-year-old star, who has been part of WWE since 2012, spoke with Bloomberg Talks about her long-term plans outside the ring. While Charlotte Flair admitted she does not yet know exactly what the next chapter of her career will look like, she said helping others will be a major focus.
“I don’t know what my next step is after WWE, but what I do know is I want to help people,” Flair said. “That’s why I invested in them because I know you can’t go wrong helping create a safe space for people. I want to become the person that I needed growing up.”
Flair added that investing in self-care initiatives felt like a natural step for her as she looks to support others in the future.
“I felt like investing in self-care for everyone was the perfect step and being their angel investor,” she said.
Charlotte Flair’s Return To WWE After Injury
Charlotte Flair returned to WWE in early 2025 after recovering from a significant injury, entering and winning the Royal Rumble match before challenging Tiffany Stratton at WrestleMania 41.
Since then, Flair has been competing as part of a tag team with Alexa Bliss. The duo recently earned a shot at the WWE Women’s Tag Team Championship after defeating Giulia and Kiana James on SmackDown.
Flair and Bliss are now set to challenge champions Nia Jax and Lash Legend in an upcoming title match.
You can personalise your Google settings to see more stories from slamwrestling.net when you search for wrestling news.
Google’s Preferred Sources feature lets you choose the websites you trust most. Once added, Google is more likely to show SLAM in Top Stories and the “from your sources” section.
- Click this link to take you directly to Google’s “Source preferences” page.
- Sign into your Google account.
- Search for slamwrestling.net.
- Tick the box next to Slam Wrestling.
Adding SLAM as a Preferred Source helps you see more of our news, features, and exclusive coverage in Google search.



