Of 93 patients with renal cell carcinoma treated at our hospital between January 1974 and December 1990, thirty-two cases with incidentally detected cancer were evaluated clinically and pathologically. The average age of the patients was 61 years old ranging from 39 to 84 years. There were 25 men and 7 women with a sex ratio of 3.6:1. Fourteen tumors had developed in the right kidney and 17 in the left kidney. One patient had bilateral tumors synchronously and was treated by radical nephrectomy with contralateral enucleation of the tumor. The proportion of incidental renal carcinoma has been increasing steadily; 87.5% of the cases was found by either abdominal ultrasonography or CT scan. Nineteen patients (59.4%) had a tumor smaller than 5 cm in diameter. There were 29 cases with G1 or G2 renal cancer and twenty with pT2. The five-year survival rate in the incidental cases was 52.2% with significantly better survival than in cases when metastasis was initially suspected, but there was no significant difference in survival between the incidentally found cases and the cases of symptomatic renal cancer.