Infection due to Onchocerca volvulus was investigated in the Nimiyama Chiefdom, Kono District, Sierra Leone, where Simulium damnosum s.l. is known to breed but no data on the prevalence and intensity of O. volvulus infection exists. Of the 735 individuals sampled by the skin snip method in five villages, 471 (64%) were infected. The infection rate for males was significantly (p less than 0.05) higher than that of the females. Two hundred and ninety-one (70.0%) of the 416 males skin snipped and 180 (56.0%) of the 323 of their female cohorts were infected. The intensity of infection increased with age, with the younger cohorts presenting lower microfilarial density (MFD). Palpable nodules were observed in 230 (48.4%) of individuals found positive for skin microfilariae and in 37 (5.0%) individuals found negative for skin microfilariae. It is concluded that O. volvulus infection is mesoendemic in the Nimiyama Chiefdom, with the intensity of infection increasing with age.