KATIE Price has completed her community service following her drink-driving conviction, but will continue volunteering. 

The Brighton-born former glamour model was ordered to carry out 100 hours of unpaid work after flipping her BMW on the B2135 in Partridge Green in September last year.

She was also handed a 16-week suspended prison sentence and two-year driving ban.

Price has been completing community service at Horsham Matters, a Christian charity that provides essential services to people in need.

The mother-of-five revealed on Instagram that she would be continuing her work with the charity, she said: “So happy I’ve completed my 100 hours community service @horshammatters_.

“What a fantastic place been so good to be treated as a real person not a product not judged and they met the real person I am not what I’m betrayed (sic) to be.

“I love it that much my mental health has benefited too. I am now officially going to be a volunteer and continue weekly helping the community and being part of a fantastic team. Thanks for having me.”

According to their website, Horsham Matters is a Christian charity that aims to relieve hardship through the provision of essential services such as food, fuel and shelter.

The organisation runs a crisis support service for people in need of essential items, along with a foodbank and budgeting support.

They also offer counselling services for foodbank clients and run a winter night shelter.

Price could still face up to five years in prison for sending an abusive message to ex Kieran Hayler about his fiancée Michelle Penticost.

She appeared in Lewes Crown Court this week, when she pleaded guilty and now faces sentencing in June. 

Judge Stephen Mooney told her: “Clearly you have accepted responsibility for an offence and pleaded guilty while you were on a suspended sentence which means you are at risk of going to prison.

“I will need to know the relevant parts of the background to consider what the appropriate sentence should be.

“Don’t be under any illusions, you run the risk of receiving an immediate custodial sentence.”