The authors describe their initial experience with stereotactic radiosurgery of 22 cases with vestibular schwannomas using a linear accelerator. 14 of them with a follow-up of at least one year were studied. 6-9 months after treatment 86% had central tumour necrosis, 71% tumour shrinkage and none of them evidence of tumour growth 3 patients developed reversible facial nerve impairment, 2 had permanent facial numbness. Hearing diminished in one case out of three with normal hearing and in two out of three with already diminished hearing. Although there is a general consensus that microsurgery is the treatment of choice for these benign tumours, stereotactic radiosurgery challenges this opinion. Stereotactic radiosurgery not only proves to be a valuable alternative for selected cases not suitable for microsurgery, but it is conceivable that it will become the treatment of choice for small vestibular tumours. Tumour control can be obtained in the majority of treated patients with fewer complications and with a higher rate of cranial nerve sparing. This series indicates that linear accelerators can achieve results similar to the Gamma Unit in the treatment of vestibular schwannomas.