An unusually prolonged outbreak of typhoid fever, from 1988 to 1994, in Terrassa (Barcelona, Spain), was caused by a casual food handler who was a carrier. The pattern of this outbreak suggested intermittent low-level exposure to Salmonella typhi. We found 70 patients with S. typhi infections, 52 of whom were available for study. Medical records were reviewed and patients were interviewed with use of a standard questionnaire. Phage typing and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) for strain subtyping were used to confirm the epidemiological data. The 27 outbreak strains shared the same phage type and the same PFGE pattern. Four sporadic strains shared the same phage type as the outbreak strain. PFGE was found to be useful for differentiating strains for epidemiological purposes.