B-cells play a major role in the immunopathogenesis of autoimmune diseases. Not only do they produce autoantibodies, but they regulate other cell types, secrete cytokines, and present antigens. They are thus potential targets for therapeutic intervention. CD20 is a B-cell specific cell surface molecule of uncertain function. An anti-CD20 chimeric mAb (rituximab) has been FDA approved for treatment of B-cell lymphomas since 1997. Rituximab also depletes normal B-cells by several mechanisms, including ADCC. Over the past seven years, it has shown promise in a number of autoimmune diseases in phase I trials and anecdotal reports. Efficacy in rheumatoid arthritis has already been demonstrated in randomized control trials (RCTs), and RCTs in SLE, inflammatory myositis, and ANCA associated vasculitis are under way. Safety does not appear to be a major problem, but continued vigilance is warranted. The increased use of rituximab, other anti-CD20 agents, and other B-cell targeting therapies holds great promise for substantial clinical benefits, as well as providing special opportunities to understand better disease pathogenesis.