Fine-needle aspiration (FNA) and frozen section evaluation are traditional components of the management of thyroid lesions. Their role and usefulness are dictated by some basic facts about thyroid pathology: (a) nodules are very common; (b ) they are benign in the majority of cases; and (c) the diagnosis of malignancy is primarily based on cytologic features in the case of papillary carcinoma, and on the presence of invasion of the tumor capsule or of blood vessels in the case of follicular carcinoma. The common occurrence of benign thyroid nodules mandates a cost-effective effective method for preoperative screening. Since, as already stated, the diagnosis of papillary thyroid carcinoma (by far the most common thyroid malignancy) is based on the identification of characteristic cytologic features, FNA has easily emerged in the past 30 years as the most accurate and cost-effective tool-indeed a true cornerstone-for the preoperative management of thyroid nodules. Standardized terminology to report cytologic diagnoses is highly recommended and is being implemented worldwide. Conversely, the importance of intraoperative frozen section diagnosis has been constantly decreasing over the past years, as a direct consequence of the widespread application of FNA. It may, however, be very useful in cases that are suspicious for papillary carcinoma on FNA and in selected cases with an indeterminate cytologic diagnosis.