Pacemaker recovery time corrected for cycle length was measured in 24 patients 6 months to 3 years after the Mustard operation for transposition of the great arteries. This index of sinoatrial (S-A) nodal function was obtained by subtracting the control R-R interval from the first R-R interval recorded after 3 minutes of rapid atrial pacing at the superior vena caval-right atrial junction. Recovery times were compared with those of a control group of 54 children with various forms of congenital heart disease who had not had cardiac surgery and whose electrocardiogram revealed normal sinus rhythm. The longest corrected pacemaker recovery time in the control group was 250 msec. Recovery time was normal (mean 115 msec) in 13 of the 24 patients who had undergone the Mustard procedure and prolonged (mean 472 msec) in the other 11. In 4 of these 11 a junctional escape complex was recorded before recovery of the S-A node. The configuration of the P wave and the development of dysrhythmias in the postoperative follow-up period were compared in patients with a normal and a prolonged corrected pacemaker recovery time. The incidence of dysrhythmias was much smaller in the former group. Normal sinus rhythm after the first postoperative week was noted in 10 (76 percent) of patients with a normal corrected pacemaker recovery time but in only 2 (18 percent) of those with an abnormal recovery time. One patient with an abnormal recovery time died suddenly 26 months after operation in spite of good hemodynamic repair. A prolonged pacemaker recovery time after the Mustard operation for transposition of the great arteries indicated that rhythm abnormalities were likely to develop, but a normal recovery time did not exclude abnormal sinus nodal function.