Simultaneous determination of progesterone, androst-4-enedione, pregnenolone, dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and 17-hydroxyprogesterone has been developed for human cerebral tissue. Before immunoassay, steroids were separated on a Celite column with propylene glycol as stationary phase with hexane containing increasing proportions of dichloromethane as mobile phase. This system allowed separation of steroids of similar polarity, especially of pregnenolone and progesterone. The brain regions studied cortex (prefrontal, parietal and temporal), cerebellum and corpus callosum, were obtained after autopsy from 9 women and 1 man between 76 and 93 years of age. Steroids were found in all regions. The overall concentrations expressed in nmol/kg of tissue were: 10.1, 7.6, 120.7, 19.6 and 10.4 respectively, for progesterone, androst-4-enedione, pregnenolone, dehydroepiandrosterone and 17-hydroxyprogesterone, corresponding to 7.3, 4.9, 74, 6.5 and 9.2 times the plasma levels. These very high concentrations, not previously described in human brain tissue, pose the question of the existence of local biosynthetic pathways independent of the peripheral endocrine gland system as well as that of progressive accumulation of steroids over a lifetime. Concentrations of each steroid in each subject varied little among the various brain regions studied, but there was much variation among the subjects with respect to the concentrations of a given steroid.