Recent findings of an association between schizophrenia and a T102C polymorphism at the 5-HT2a receptor gene (particularly with genotype 1-2 and 2-2 and allele 2) prompted us to investigate this marker in familial Irish schizophrenic patients, their relatives, and ethnically matched unrelated controls; 247 probands and 249 controls were included in this study. In contrast to some studies, we found no evidence of significant differences either in the frequency of the genotypes 1-2 and 2-2 or allele 2 between the schizophrenic patients and the controls. A transmission disequilibrium test, run on the full set of 265 families yielded no evidence to support linkage disequilibrium. Linkage analysis with both parametric and non-parametric methods yielded strongly negative results. Our findings are consistent with other recent association studies which argue against the involvement of the 5-HT2a/T102C polymorphism in predisposition to schizophrenia. The positive findings reported to date might have occurred by chance or the apparent conflict may be due to genetic heterogeneity between samples.