The appearance of nodal metastases from cutaneous melanoma represents a poor prognosis. Surgery is the only possible treatment for these patients since chemotherapy or immunotherapy have no confirmed specific efficacy in adjuvant or therapeutic schedules. If, for clinically metastatic regional nodes, there is complete agreement on the opportunity of dissection, in the case of clinically uninvolved nodes some controversy exists. For melanomas of the extremities, two different randomized studies have demonstrated no difference in the long-term outcome of patients with stage I melanoma, whether immediate or delayed node dissection is performed. For axial melanomas, although definitive data are not available, there are preliminary statistical results as well as anatomical and technical reasons, suggesting an identical surgical approach to that performed for primaries of other sites. Therefore, apart from specific cases, there is good evidence that node dissection should be planned only for patients with clinically involved regional nodes.