A top WA jockey is fighting for life after a horror fall in Albany on Saturday morning.

Natasha Faithfull suffered punctured lungs, broken ribs, a broken collarbone and a lacerated liver in the nasty trackwork fall.

The 25-year-old was stabilised in Albany before she was flown to Perth by the Royal Flying Doctors Service on Saturday afternoon.

“Apparently she was just coming back from the beach and she fell with the horse over a sandbank,” Racing and Wagering WA racing careers and training manager Ron Fleming said.

“The horse rolled on her and then jumped on her trying to get back up which is never good. It’s very unfortunate.”

In a post on social media, Ms Faithfull’s mother said the 25-year-old’s horse got spooked before they rolled down an embankment.

She was placed in intensive care, less than 24 hours after she rode a winning double in Albany on Friday night.

She is due to arrive at Royal Perth Hospital on Saturday night.

It’s not the first time Ms Faithfull has been injured in a race fall.

In August 2017, the top jockey was aboard Kooltatt, trained by Craig Wright, when the horse faltered in its action nearing the 400m mark dislodging her in front of several other runners in the first race.

After crashing to the turf in the heavy fall, Ms Faithfull lay motionless and was quickly attended to by ambulance officers before being transferred to Kalgoorlie Heath Campus.

She stayed in under observation for the night and was luckily released the next morning with just a broken ankle.

Ms Faithfull has been riding for more than a decade, after being taught by her mother when she was 13.

She has spoken previously of her years of constant bullying as a small teenager before finally finding her calling as a jockey.