Myrtle Beach's 60-mile Grand Strand draws more than 14 million visitors annually, and the long, gently sloping sandbars off this coast concentrate baitfish and the blacktip and spinner sharks that feed in the very troughs families wade in. SharkWatch tracks confirmed incidents from North Myrtle south to Georgetown and pushes a real-time alert to your phone when a verified bite or sighting happens at your saved beach.
Get alerts for Myrtle Beach, SC — $19 lifetimeOne-time payment · Works on iPhone & Android · Refund anytime before launch
Incidents our system tracked within 200km in the last 90 days. Alerts only fire for confirmed events.
No shark incidents tracked within 200km of Myrtle Beach, SC in the last 90 days — that's exactly when a surprise sighting matters most.
Lulu's Law was signed June 26, 2026 — Amber-Alert-style shark warnings are coming. But the FCC has 180 days to build them (~late December), and they only fire after an attack, where it happened. SharkWatch alerts you to confirmed bites and sightings near Myrtle Beach, SC all summer.
Become a SharkWatch member ($19 once, lifetime), install the web app to your phone's home screen, and save Myrtle Beach, SC as your beach. When a shark bite or sighting is confirmed within 200km, your phone gets a push alert.
SharkWatch confirms incidents from multiple independent news domains or an official report (lifeguards, police, beach authority) before alerting. Lulu's Law was signed June 26, 2026, but the FCC has 180 days to build the federal system — alerts aren't expected until ~late December 2026, and they only fire after an attack.
No. You save beach regions; we match confirmed incidents to those regions. The app never follows your phone around.