Although definitive radiotherapy in the management of early glottic carcinomas continues to offer excellent control, a small proportion of patients will have relapse. Between January 1972 and December 1984, 148 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the glottis (stage I in 95 patients and stage II in 53 patients) had definitive radiotherapy at the University of Virginia Medical Center. We retrospectively analyzed patient data in an attempt to identify patients at risk for relapse and the patterns of failure. The three-year determinate survival for the entire population was 94.5% (stage I--100%, stage II--86%). Twenty of the 148 patients (14%) had relapse after radiotherapy. Failure in the primary site alone was observed in 17 patients (11%), two patients (1%) had relapse in the lymphatics of the neck without evidence of primary recurrence, and one patient (0.7%) had both neck and distant disease. Of the 19 patients who had definitive surgery after recurrence, 13 (68%) were successfully salvaged. Multivariate analysis was done to identify independent factors on relapse and survival. Statistically significant factors included persistent hoarseness after radiotherapy (P = .00005), impaired cord mobility (P = .00002), subglottic extension (P = .02), anterior commissure extension (P = .001), and multifocal involvement in stage I disease (P = .0008). We conclude that a majority of the small patient population with recurrent glottic carcinoma after radiotherapy may be salvaged with surgery, and we have identified patients at increased risk for recurrence.