Polymorphisms in methionine synthase (MTR) gene may be involved in carcinogenesis by affecting DNA methylation. However, association studies on MTR A2756G polymorphism in cancers have reported conflicting results. Therefore we performed a metaanalysis to better assess the associations. A total of 24 896 cancer patients and 33 862 controls from 52 articles for MTR A2756G were investigated. Overall, individuals carrying MTR 2756GG genotype had a subtly reduced cancer risk under a recessive genetic model (odds ratio (OR), 0.92; P¼0.053; 95% confidence interval (95% CI), 0.84-1.00; I 2 ¼0.0%; P heterogeneity ¼0.61). In the subgroup analyses by ethnicity, 2756GG was associated with a significantly reduced cancer risk in European populations (OR, 0.83; P¼0.001; 95% CI, 0.74-0.93; I 2 ¼0.0%; P heterogeneity ¼0.99). However, in Asian populations, a significantly elevated association between 2756GG genotype and cancer risk was observed (OR, 1.33; P¼0.012; 95% CI, 1.06-1.65; I 2 ¼0.0%; P heterogeneity ¼0.50). In studies stratified by tumor site, there was a significantly reduced risk of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) (OR, 0.54; P¼0.049; 95% CI, 0.29-1.00; I 2 ¼10.7%; P heterogeneity ¼0.33) and colorectal cancer (OR, 0.63; P¼0.004; 95% CI, 0.47-0.87; I 2 ¼0.0%; P heterogeneity ¼0.73) in European populations. Our study indicates that MTR A2756G polymorphism is a candidate gene polymorphism for cancer susceptibility regardless of environmental factors. Large-scale, well-designed, and population-based studies are required to further investigate gene-gene and gene-environment interactions on MTR A2756G polymorphism and tissue-specific cancer risk in an ethnicity-specific population.