Sarah Murdoch put on a stylish display as she jetted out of Sydney Airport with her son on Wednesday.
The British-Australian model, 51, looked effortlessly chic for the flight in black trousers, a matching coloured jumper and a long coat.
But it was her accessories that stole the show.
The glamorous wife of media mogul Lachlan Murdoch stepped out in a pair of black Yves Saint Laurent loafers which retail for $1665.
She carried a light musk coloured YSL handbag which costs $4160 and also held a $12,535 black duffle bag from The Row.
The blonde beauty tied her locks back into a low ponytail and revealed her youthful visage by going makeup free.
Sarah Murdoch (pictured) put on a stylish display as she jetted out of Sydney Airport with her son on Wednesday
Sarah has been happily married to her husband Lachlan for 26 years after tying the knot in 1999.
They are parents to sons Kalan Alexander, 18, and Aidan Patrick, 17, and daughter Aerin Elisabeth, 13.
The couple own a home in Bellevue Hill, Sydney, known as Le Manoir.
Sarah and Lachlan were spotted packing on the PDA in February last year as they watched the SailGP championships in Sydney.
While watching the race, Rupert Murdoch’s son and News Corp chairman Lachlan, leaned in and gave his wife a kiss.
After sharing the intimate moment, the pair were seen sitting and chatting with friends.
At one point, Lachlan was seen leaning on the edge of the balcony and puffing on a giant cigar.
Just days prior, the couple had attended the opening of Sydney’s first LGBTQIA+ museum, Qtopia.
The glamorous model wife of media mogul Lachlan Murdoch stepped out in a pair of black Yves Saint Laurent loafers which retail for $1665. She also held a YSL handbag which costs $4160 and a $12,535 black duffle bag from The Row
She cut a glamorous figure in a black halter-neck ensemble as she posed for the cameras at the National Art School.
Qtopia in Darlinghurst is considered to be Sydney’s new home of queer history and culture.
The museum, the first of its kind in Australia, was once a former police station where 53 people were held after being arrested over a street march in 1978 to call for gay rights and the decriminalisation of same-sex relations.
The New South Wales Police Force apologised in 2016 for the violence and arrests around the march, which has now come to be known as the first Sydney Mardi Gras.