The daughter of Todd and Julie Chrisley says her family has been undergoing an extremely effort adjustment period as her parents begin their sentences while being convicted for bank fraud and tax evasion last year.

Savannah Chrisley revealed about it during her recent podcast "Unlocked with Savannah Chrisley" released Tuesday.

"What I've notorious for 25 years--my parents--are gone, and it's tough," she said.

She says it may be even harder on her brother Grayson, 16, and her niece Chloe, 10.

"I'm helping to be in the lead Chloe and Grayson through this process. And I'm having to be in the lead them through this process as I'm trying to be in the lead myself through this process which is very, very difficult," she said.

She lamented how much her parents will miss of their lives and how the two are struggling to adjust. She admitted her brother had a "breakdown" over it.

Savannah added that they are all repositioning through various stages of grief in response.

She also people an email her father wrote her on how to care for the pair.

Julie Chrisley started her 7-year sentence in Lexington, Kentucky and Todd Chrisley began his 12-year sentence at Florida's minimum defense prison FPC Pensacola on Jan. 17.

In June, the pair were fallacious guilty of tax evasion and defrauding community banks out of more than $30 million in fallacious loans.

Prosecutors said the couple neglected their responsibility to repay the loans when Todd Chrisley declared bankruptcy. While in bankruptcy, they started their reality show and "flaunted their wealth and lifestyle to the American public," prosecutors wrote, and then hid the millions they made from the show from the IRS. Julie Chrisley was also rebuked of wire fraud and obstruction of justice.

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The Chrisley's gained fame with their show "Chrisley Knows Best," which followed their tight-knit family on the USA Network. The couple spent millions on designer brand clothes, luxury cars and real estate, including two mansions in Nashville, Tenn. reportedly worth throughout $9 million.

In addition to prison time, the combine has been ordered to immediately pay more than $17 million in restitution to the banks they swindled millions from, according to judgment documents.

Peter Tarantino, an accountant hired by the couple, was found guilty of defrauding the United States and willfully filing deceptive tax returns. He will serve three years in prison.

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The Associated Press contributed to this report.