×

Woman seriously injured in shark attack at Sydney beach

By Thomson Reuters Jun 12, 2026 | 9:52 PM

SYDNEY, June 13 (Reuters) – A woman swimmer was seriously injured in a shark attack at a Sydney beach on Saturday, authorities said, in the latest of a spate of shark attacks off Australia’s ​coast.

Emergency services were called to Coogee Beach in the east ‌of Sydney, Australia’s largest city, in the morning on reports that the 35-year-old had been bitten by a large shark about 30 metres (100 feet) from the shore.

“The woman was pulled from the water by members of the public who commenced first aid,” ‌police ​said in a statement, adding that the victim ⁠suffered serious arm and leg ⁠injuries.

“She has large flesh wounds to the leg and the arms that are going to require a lot of surgery,” New South Wales Ambulance Inspector Mike Corlis told reporters at Coogee Beach.

Coogee Beach and ​others in the city’s Randwick Council area were closed for 24 hours following the attack.

“We’ll be working closely with the New South Wales ⁠government, awaiting instruction as to when it ⁠is safe to reopen,” council Mayor Dylan Parker told reporters.

A ​witness to the attack, Nicola Logan, told Reuters at Coogee Beach that ​she saw a “massive pool of blood” in the water, then “a lady ‌kind of motioning to swim, lots of splashing, and then a ski paddler was out trying to bring her in”.

A week earlier, a man died after being attacked by a shark while fishing off the coast of ⁠Western Australia state, in the latest fatal incident.

Last month, a 39-year-old man died after being attacked while fishing on Queensland’s Great Barrier Reef. Ten days ⁠earlier, a 38-year-old was ‌fatally mauled off an island near Perth in Western ⁠Australia.

Dozens of beaches along Australia’s east coast, including in ​Sydney, ‌were closed in January after four shark attacks in ​two days. ⁠Those followed heavy rain that created murky water, attracting sharks and reducing their visibility.

Most shark attacks occur along the east and southeast seaboard of Australia, which averages around 20 such incidents a year, according to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.

(Reporting by Sam McKeith and Christine Chen in Sydney; Editing ​by William Mallard)