Although patients are commonly reviewed after primary treatment for squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the oral cavity, there is little evidence about the frequency and duration of such a review. To try and obtain further information about current practice within the United Kingdom we used a structured telephone questionnaire to contact 50 units. Most of them (n=40, 80%) had developed follow-up protocols, and 38 (76%) reviewed patients for 5 years. All units examined patients monthly for the first year, and 90% of patients were seen 2-monthly for the following year. Slight variations for follow-up existed in years 3 and 4, but by the fifth year, 6-monthly review was almost universal (96%). Despite this surprising concordance, few units implemented a risk-adapted follow-up protocol that was aimed at targeting those people likely to be cured of relapsing disease.