Alex Scott showed off her incredible figure as she shared a slew of snaps from her sun-soaked Barbados getaway on Friday.
The footballer, 37, slipped into a bright lavender swimsuit which boasted racy cut outs at her toned midriff.
Taking to Instagram the stunner could be seen relaxing on a lavish yacht trip before taking a ride on a jetski.
Alex showed off her toned physique and long legs and shielded herself from the sun behind shades and a baseball cap.
The BBC presenter enjoyed a cooling drink as she took in the gorgeous views before posing for selfies with pals.
Alex looked relaxed in the snaps as she topped up her tan while her brunette tresses tumbled past her shoulders.
The television personality then hopped on a jet ski, later taking to her Instagram Stories as she visited a rum factory and enjoyed a tipple.
She captioned the snaps with a song lyric: 'Don't wanna waste my days I want to spend them on enjoyment'.
Last week she shared more snaps from her trip posing flawlessly in a skimpy snakeskin print bikini.
It comes after last year Alex fired back at her father Tony for disputing her claims about how he abused her as a child - which she has revealed in her new memoir.
In a recent interview, Tony dismissed her claims that he bullied and abused her during a traumatic childhood, insisting that he was strict - but not violent.
Following her father's comments, Alex told the BBC: 'I almost feel angry at myself that I'm allowing him to hurt me again by those claims.'
The ex-England footballer said she hoped to 'free her mother' by writing about her father's abusive behaviour during her turbulent childhood.
Addressing his denial, Alex said she refuses to let her dad win anymore after witnessing how his rebuttal affected her mother, Carol McKee.
Speaking to Radio 4's Emma Barnett, she said: 'That story from him coming out yesterday takes her back to a place...
'Hearing the pain and the terror again in her voice last night - that's why I don't know what I can do. But I'm not going to allow him to win no more.
'This book, the reason was to get some peace. And I suppose when you are in peace it gives you a new position of power and that's maybe why he's trying to (respond) right now.'
Tony rebuffed claims he was 'violent' towards his family during the interview and insisted he 'didn't know why Alex was saying these things.'
He said: 'Perhaps she is judging me by today's standards, I don't know. Parents were a lot tougher back then. But I was never violent, that's just not me. I never beat Alex or anyone else in the family or did anything like that.'
Alex hit back: 'I actually don't care what happened to me. If you are saying being beaten with a belt is just being strict - I can take that, I really don't care about me.'
'What I do care is about my mum and the fear and terror that she had to live in and the fact I was never able to help her in that, but what I can do is help her now by speaking the truth. And everything I wrote in that book, I stand by it. It is the truth.'
Alex has claimed that Tony's words 'lit a new fire in her' and she wants to fight to do all she can to help women in similar positions and those who have similar feelings to herself or her mother.
In her new memoir, the BBC football pundit described her father as a 'controlling violent drunk' who was 'stupidly cruel' and that she and her brother would frequently hear him beating their mother - with one incident so violent that she believed that she had died.
On one occasion she recalled how he beat them and made them throw their toys away insisting that life under him has left her so traumatised that to this day she is unable to hug her mother or brother Ronnie.
Alex was comforted by Holly Willoughby after breaking down in tears on ITV's This Morning as she spoke about life under her father prior to him walking out on her mother and leaving the family home in east London when she was seven.
But speaking exclusively to MailOnline, Tony, 63, vehemently denied the allegations and said he could not understand why Alex is portraying him in this way.
He cried: 'I have no idea why she's saying all this stuff. I was raised in a strict but loving Jamaican family and Alex should know what they are like. I taught her discipline, I did a lot to help her.
'Perhaps she is judging me by today's standards, I don't know. Parents were a lot tougher back then. But I was never violent, that's just not me. I never beat Alex or anyone else in the family or did anything like that.'