| 1. Kim Ju Ae's exact name and birth date remain unconfirmed due to limited information from the North Korean government. |
| 2. Speculations suggest she was born in 2013, with earlier estimates stating she could be 10 or 11 years old. |
| 3. There are conflicting reports regarding her siblings, with some claims suggesting an older brother born in 2010 and a younger sibling born in 2017. |
| 4. Dennis Rodman referred to her as 'Ju Ae' during his visit to North Korea, although her actual name might be different. |
| 5. Kim Ju Ae was publicly acknowledged as Kim Jong Un's 'beloved' and 'respected' daughter during state media coverage. |
| 6. She has been seen at various public events since 2022, including military celebrations and missile launches. |
| 7. North Korean authorities reportedly required citizens with the same name to change it. |
| 8. In 2025, she was recognized with the title 'Morning Star of Korea', previously associated with her grandfather, Kim Il Sung. |
| 9. Kim Ju Ae is being educated at home in Pyongyang and is noted for her strong skills in horseback riding. |
| 10. Kim Ju Ae's exact birth date remains unconfirmed due to limited information from the North Korean government, though South Korean intelligence estimates she was born around January 2013. |
| 11. She was given the official title 'Morning Star of Korea' in late 2023, a deliberate parallel to her grandfather Kim Il Sung who earned this title during guerrilla warfare against Japanese colonial rule. |
| 12. Kim Ju Ae is believed to be Kim Jong Un's second child, with an older brother born around summer 2010 and a younger sibling born around early 2017. |
| 13. She made her first public appearance on November 18, 2022, at the test launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile, inspecting the Hwasong-17 alongside her father. |
| 14. State media initially referred to her as Kim Jong Un's 'beloved' and 'precious' daughter before adopting the adjective 'respected', typically reserved for the most honored members of North Korean society. |
| 15. In a July 2024 closed-door briefing, South Korean intelligence reported that Kim Ju Ae was being trained to succeed her father as supreme leader. |
| 16. In February 2026, South Korean lawmakers were informed that Kim Ju Ae had reached the 'successor-designate stage', a significant shift from previous descriptions of her being in 'successor training'. |
| 17. She traveled to Beijing in September 2024, her first known overseas trip, which analysts interpreted as a message similar to Kim Jong-il's 2010 visit to China with his son Kim Jong-un before his succession. |
| 18. Kim Ju Ae is homeschooled in Pyongyang and is noted for her exceptional horseback riding skills, which particularly please her father. |
| 19. In official photographs, she is consistently positioned centrally with senior figures visibly deferring to her, suggesting deliberate staging of her prominence. |
| 20. Kim Ju Ae's exact birth date remains unconfirmed by North Korean authorities, though South Korean intelligence estimates she was born around January 2013. |
| 21. She traveled to Beijing in September 2025, her first known overseas trip, which analysts interpreted as a message similar to Kim Jong-il's 2010 visit to China with his son Kim Jong-un before his succession. |
| 22. North Korean state media have referred to her as 'the beloved child' and as a 'great person of guidance' (hyangdo in Korean), a phrase traditionally reserved for senior leaders and their successors. |
| 23. An increasing number of analysts have begun to question whether an older Kim son exists at all, further consolidating the case for Kim Ju Ae as the primary heir. |
| 24. South Korean intelligence estimates she was born around January 2013, making her approximately 13 years old as of 2026. |
| 25. She is believed to be Kim Jong Un's second child, with an older brother born around summer 2010 and a younger sibling born around early 2017. |
| 26. Dennis Rodman referred to her as 'Ju Ae' during his visit to North Korea, providing external confirmation of her name. |
| 27. North Korean state media have referred to her as 'the beloved child' and as a 'guide', phrases traditionally reserved for senior leaders and their successors. |