Many human tumors express low amounts of HLA class I molecules relative to the normal cells from which they are derived. From experimental work it is clear that the malignant behavior of a tumor cell may depend on its MHC class I expression. Therefore, it is of obvious interest to study the HLA class I expression of human tumors in their various stages. We have studied the HLA class I expression by the cells in premalignant epithelial lesions and invasive carcinoma of the bladder and uterine cervix using immunoperoxidase staining for beta 2-microglobulin of paraffin-embedded tissue. We here assume that beta 2-microglobulin expression by malignant and premalignant cells equals HLA class I expression. Thirty-two of the 36 invasive tumors expressed less overall beta 2-microglobulin than cells from the normal epithelium. In contrast, approximately two-thirds of 34 premalignant bladder epithelia and 47 premalignant cervix epithelia displayed higher overall beta 2-microglobulin expression than the normal epithelium. Thus, a systematic large-scale elimination of HLA class I high-expressing tumor cell variants may take place only after the tumor penetrates the basement membrane.