The present cross-sectional observational study was made in family medicine offices of Timi� County, Romania. The aim of the study was to investigate the prevalence of urinary microalbumin excretion (MAU) in resistant systemic arterial hypertension (RH), to analyze patients� biochemical and clinical characteristics, and the predictive factors for MAU. From a total number of 347 patients, MAU was detected in 76 cases (21.9%). The microalbuminuria positive patients were older, with significant higher office systolic blood pressure (BP) (155 � 13.50 vs 148 � 12.40 mmHg, p [ 0.0001) and diastolic blood pressure (94 � 12.20 vs 88 � 14.6 mmHg, p = 0.0013), higher prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy, diabetes mellitus, obesity, ischemic and peripheral arterial disease. MAU positive patients presented statistical significant differences in biochemical data concerning: fasting plasma glucose (FPG) (118.80 � 32.02 vs 108.01 � 26.01 mg/dL, p = 0.003), impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) (10.52 % vs 4.94 %), glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) (6.56 � 0.98% vs 5.96 � 0.91%, p [ 0.001), reduced estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) (56.10 � 15.4 vs 69.30 � 17.5 ml/min/1.73m2, p [ 0.001) and higher potassium levels (4.71 � 0.43 vs 4.59 � 0.44 mg/dL, p = 0.0378). No significant differences were noticed regarding LDL- and HDL-cholesterol, triglycerides, uric acid and serum creatinine. In a logistic multivariate analysis independent predictors for MAU were: systolic BP (odds ratio, OR = 1.024, 95% confidence interval, CI:1.011-1.039, p [ 0.001), HbA1c (OR = 1.324, 95% CI: 1.078-1.724, p = 0.008) and eGFR (OR = 0.989, 95% CI: 0.977-0.999, p = 0.01). Our findings suggest that an important part of RH patients have microalbuminuria and highlight the importance of controlling its predictors, in order to improve patients� outcome.