HomeNews ArticlesIn Her Own Lane: Bronte Campbell Calls Time
Australian Dolphins | 07 June 2026

In Her Own Lane: Bronte Campbell Calls Time

SHOWING the same sense of timing that delivered three Olympic gold medals across four Olympiads, 32-year-old Bronte Campbell (pictured) has announced her retirement from competitive swimming.

A day out from the Australian Swimming Trials to determine selection for the 2026 Glasgow Commonwealth Games team and the Pan Pacific Championships, the multifaceted Campbell has called time.

In a stellar career, Campbell also garnered five World Championship golds, five Commonwealth Games gold medals, eight World Cup golds and a Junior World Title to name a sprinkling.

Outside the pool, Campbell wrote poetry, worked as senior consultant at a top-tier accounting firm, became a motivational speaker and advocated for her teammates as President of the Australian Swimmers Association (ASA), a role she served from 2018 to 2023.

But the recent success of Campbell’s activewear brand Earthletica to raise more than a million in public equity crowdfunding to take the sustainable brand mainstream helped prompt the decision to retire.

“I felt I was ready … ready for my next challenge outside the bubble of swimming. As you get older, the sacrifice feels heavier … and I felt the better choice for me was to appreciate this wonderful sport from outside the pool,” she said.

“It is something I have been weighing up since Paris … I used the likes of Susie O’Neill and Matt Abood as sounding boards, spoke with people I love and felt it was time.

“I’m proud of the longevity of my career, the second half I won fewer medals but to navigate injuries (shoulder and neck) and to come back and make Paris after a very real struggle, I am super proud of.

“I am also proud of the entire Dolphins team and how we have moved forward together. Now I am passionate about health and environmental performance wear.

“There is a better way for us to experience active wear – a better way for our bodies and the planet. Growing community and joy from the act of movement, connecting like-minded people.”

Born in Malawi, Campbell moved to Australia with her family in 2001 and began swimming at Indooroopilly Swimming Club alongside her sister, Cate.

They were the first Australian sisters to compete in the same event at the same Olympics in London 2012 and the pair went on to become one of the most recognisable duos in Australian sport.

Two years later, she was part of what would become the launching point of the Dolphins decade of dominance – that continues to this day – in the women’s 4x100m freestyle.

At the 2014 Commonwealth Games, Campbell swam in the women’s 4x100m freestyle relay team that broke the world record in 3:30.98 – the first of four world records she was a part of in her decade-long career, underscoring her role as a stalwart of Australia’s relay success.

Across the next three Olympic Games, Campbell remained a key part of Australia’s women’s 4x100m freestyle relay, helping the team win gold in Rio, Tokyo and Paris.

Chronic pain and an odometer revving at 19,000 strokes a week saw Campbell spend 18 months out of the pool after the Tokyo Olympics and contemplate retirement as the perfect panacea.

But with Paris calling, Campbell ignored shoulder, neck, hip and elbow pain to have one last Olympic fling.

Throughout that period, she not only overcame injuries but became a leader within the Dolphins team – in and out of the pool.

Campbell was part of the Dolphins’ leadership team from 2016-21 and, in addition to her work with team culture, as President of the ASA worked to improve athlete financial stability and help grow the sport.

The Sydney-based athlete was a key figure in the drafting and signing of a Memorandum of Understanding that now sees athletes receive a share of Swimming Australia’s commercial revenue from sponsorship, broadcast rights and licensing – the first agreement of its kind for the sport.

Campbell leaves the sport as the fifth Australian swimmer to compete in four Olympic Games.

Dolphins Head Coach Rohan Taylor said: “Bronte was fierce competitor on two fronts – in the water as an athlete, and out of the water as a leader.”

“Obviously winning the 50m and 100m world championship titles in 2015 stand out, and Bronte’s reliability and consistency as a cornerstone of our women’s freestyle relay teams.

“And her diligence and professionalism to work her way back into the Paris team after taking time off was also a real credit to her professionalism.

“But most people don’t realise her impact as a leader particularly from Tokyo Olympics onwards – she significantly helped shape the Dolphins’ culture.

“I know whatever Bronte does next will be approached in the same way – professionally and diligently. Her excellence was never an accident.

“It was the result of high intention, sincere effort and intelligent execution.”

And in the case of Campbell, an incredible capacity to endure pain.

Congratulations to Dolphin #716.

Bronte’s Career Snapshot:

  • Four-time Olympian (London 2012, Rio 2016, Tokyo 2020/21, Paris 2024)
  • Four-time Olympic medallist: 3 gold (women’s 4x100m freestyle relay – Rio, Tokyo, Paris), 1 silver (mixed 4x100m freestyle relay – Tokyo 2020/21)
  • 11-time World Championship medallist: 5 gold, 4 silver, 2 bronze
  • Eight-time Commonwealth Games medallist (Glasgow 2014: 2 gold, 1 silver, 1 bronze; Gold Coast 2018: 3 gold, 1 silver)
  • Part of four world record-breaking women’s 4x100m freestyle relay teams:
    • Glasgow 2014 – 3:30.98 (Bronte Campbell, Melanie Schlanger, Emma McKeon and Cate Campbell)
    • Rio 2016 – 3:30.65 (Emma McKeon, Brittany Elmslie, Bronte & Cate Campbell)
    • Gold Coast 2018 – 3:30.05 (Shayna Jack, Bronte Campbell, Emma McKeon and Cate Campbell)
    • Tokyo 2020/21 – 3:29.69 (Bronte Campbell, Meg Harris, Emma McKeon and Cate Campbell)
  • Bronte was only the third swimmer in history to take the 50m and 100m freestyle double at a World Championships when she won in 2015.