Fifteen pediatric patients with biopsy- or culture-proved nonspinal osteomyelitis were studied with magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. Osteomyelitis was acute in seven patients, subacute in three, and chronic in five. Four patients had subperiosteal abscesses, one had a large associated soft-tissue abscess, and one had an intraosseous (Brodie) abscess. Areas of active inflammation had decreased marrow signal intensity on T1-weighted images, increased signal intensity on T2-weighted images, and enhancement on T1-weighted images obtained after gadopentetate dimeglumine administration (n = 10). Abscesses were rim enhancing (n = 3) or not (n = 2) with gadolinium-enhanced MR imaging. Nonenhancing areas presumably represented necrotic material. Gadolinium-enhanced MR imaging assisted in definition of the presence and extent of nonvascularized fluid collections within the bone and/or adjacent soft tissues and the extent of bone involvement in patients with chronic osteomyelitis. It also helped guide surgical debridement of intraosseous disease (n = 7) and open or percutaneous drainage of subperiosteal or soft-tissue fluid collections (n = 5).