Objectives: A 5-year retrospective injury survey was conducted with 45 female elite soccer players from the Queensland Academy of Sport (QAS), to record the anatomical distribution, diagnosis and incidence of injury and identify possible risk factors in elite female soccer players at the QAS from 1993–1998. Methods: Data were gathered from medical, physiological, coaches and team managers' records. Results: The study recorded 239 injuries. Incidence of injury was highest in 1994 (12·2 per 1000h) and lowest in 1995 (5·0 per 1000h). Athletic exposure almost doubled between 1994 and 1995. Incidence of injury per 1000 athletic exposure hours decreased from 12·2 to 5 between 1994 and 1995. The leg accounted for 81·5% of all injuries and 52% of injuries involved the foot, ankle and shin. Strains (35%) and sprains (31%) were the most common diagnoses. Most injuries were of a mild nature (61%), with major injuries accounting for 19% of total injuries over the period 1993–1998. The most common major injuries were stress fractures (29%), with tibial stress fractures being the most common type. Injuries to the ankle, shin or both these areas were sustained by 66% of players. Seventy-six percent of ankle injuries and 100% of shin injuries were recurrent. Twenty-two percent of players had both ankle and shin injuries, in 90% of cases ankle injury was sustained before the shin injury. Conclusions: Ankle and shin were the most common injury in this group of high performance female soccer players with high recurrence. Incidence of injury may be related to athletic exposure.