Increasing defibrillation efficacy by lowering the defibrillation threshold (DFT) is an important goal in positioning implantable cardioverter-defibrillator electrodes. Clinically, the DFT is difficult to estimate noninvasively. It has been suggested that the DFT relates to the myocardial voltage gradient distribution, but this relation has not been quantitatively demonstrated. We analyzed the relation between the experimentally measured DFT's and the simulated myocardial voltage gradients provided by finite element modeling. We performed a series of experiments in 11 pigs to measure the DFT's, and created and solved three-dimensional subject-specific finite element models to assess the correlation between the computed myocardial voltage gradient histograms and the DFT's. Our data show a statistically significant correlation between the DFT and the left ventricular voltage gradient distribution, with the septal region being more significant (correlation coefficient of 0.74) than other myocardial regions. The correlation between the DFT and the right ventricular and the atrial voltage gradient, on the other hand, is not significant.