Overview

White sharks are wide-ranging hunters of productive temperate seas, moving between coastal feeding areas and offshore routes. Their shape is simple and unmistakable: a robust gray back, bright white belly, and broad serrated teeth. Despite their reputation, most people will never encounter one in the wild. A heavy torpedo-shaped shark with a pointed snout, tall triangular first dorsal fin, broad crescent tail, and large triangular serrated teeth. The upper body is usually gray to brownish and contrasts sharply with a white underside. Widely distributed in temperate and subtropical seas of both hemispheres. It occurs near productive coasts, offshore islands, shelf edges, and open-ocean routes linking seasonal feeding areas.

White sharks use habitats from the surf zone and rocky headlands to pelagic waters over deep basins. Juveniles are more often associated with coastal nurseries, while larger animals move between coastal feeding sites and offshore waters.

One of the most recognized sharks in the world.

Why it matters: Like other lamnid sharks, it can keep parts of its body warmer than the surrounding sea, which helps it hunt in cold productive water.

Common nameWhite shark
Scientific nameCarcharodon carcharias
FamilyLamnidae
OrderLamniformes
Max length6.1 m
Depth range0 to 1200 meters
ConservationVulnerable
RegionCoastal temperate oceans worldwide
DietFish, rays, marine mammals
HabitatCoastal shelves and open ocean routes
Why it stands outCountershaded stealth body

What this shark is

A heavy torpedo-shaped shark with a pointed snout, tall triangular first dorsal fin, broad crescent tail, and large triangular serrated teeth. The upper body is usually gray to brownish and contrasts sharply with a white underside.

Where it lives

Widely distributed in temperate and subtropical seas of both hemispheres. It occurs near productive coasts, offshore islands, shelf edges, and open-ocean routes linking seasonal feeding areas.

White sharks use habitats from the surf zone and rocky headlands to pelagic waters over deep basins. Juveniles are more often associated with coastal nurseries, while larger animals move between coastal feeding sites and offshore waters.

How it differs from similar sharks

Countershaded stealth body

Compare it against Great Hammerhead.

Why it is notable

This species is involved in some of the world's most serious shark bite incidents, but encounters remain rare at ocean scale. Fishing pressure, bycatch, and trade in fins and jaws have also contributed to population decline.

IUCN, NOAA, Sharkipedia, and broad shark catalogues agree on the global temperate to subtropical distribution, aplacental viviparity, and large size of the species. Reported giant individuals vary widely in older literature, so the maximum size here is intentionally conservative and avoids unverified extreme claims.

Related shark pages

These links are meant to help readers continue through related species, not force extra clicks.

Great hammerhead photograph showing the wide cephalofoil and tall first dorsal fin; not to scale.
Sphyrna mokarran

Great Hammerhead

Long-cephalofoil hunter that patrols warm coastal waters.

6.1 m maxCritically Endangered