SERENA WILLIAMS has wowed fans with a head-turning new summer look.
The former tennis superstar showed she was beach-ready in a host of new swimsuit snaps.

Serena Williams has stunned in a new swimsuit photoshoot[/caption]
The 43-year-old is a tennis icon and winner of 23 Grand Slam titles[/caption]
Williams has grossed over $300m since hanging up her racket in 2022[/caption]
The tennis star wowed her 18 million followers with the set[/caption]
Williams rocked a stunning white and blue swimsuit in the new photoshoot.
The 43-year-old posed in a series of sultry snaps for robot cleaner brand BeatBot.
Serena dazzled in a pool under bright blue skies to the delight of her 18.1 million Instagram followers.
“Schools out … it’s summer and swimsuit season,” she captioned the snaps.
“Hope you are ready!” Serena added.
“Prettiest I have ever seen you look….And you always look gorgeous!” gasped one fan in response.
“In Grand Slam shape,” wrote a lovestruck second.
“You look AMAZING,” gushed a third.
“I need this swimsuit,” declared a fourth.
Williams hung up her racket for the last time in August 2022.
She won a remarkable 23 Grand Slam titles during her glittering career.
The tennis icon has amassed a $340million post-retirement fortune with shrewd investments and daring business ventures.
She is reportedly set to lend her hand to producing a tennis-themed drama series.
Deadline claims Serena is set to work with streaming platform Netflix on a new show.
The series will be based on the novel Carrie Soto is Back by Taylor Jenkins Reid.
Most of Williams’ vast fortune has come from Serena Ventures, her startup which has since invested in 85 companies.

The tennis icon is preparing for a new venture with Netflix[/caption]
Williams said: “A lot of people don’t know that I’ve been investing for 15 years. It was natural.
“I started thinking about what’s going to shape our world, whether it’s through transportation, technology, consumer goods.
“Whatever that is, I wanted to be a part of shaping it.
“I want to invest in B-to-B [business-to-business] companies and know how I could invest in early stage companies early on and have a big reward.
“I didn’t know all the lingo at the time. I didn’t know that it was called early stage investing and that it was even a thing.
“I didn’t know that V.C. was a thing. But it is something I was drawn to because I am a curious person.”