Summary: Ninety-seven fixed surgical thyroid specimens and 63 unfixed and 40 fixed thyroid specimens from autopsies were examined for their oxalate content. Proteases were used to process the tissue, and the oxalate was determined with an enzymatic assay. The fixed samples were grouped into seven diagnostic categories (diffuse colloid goitre; partially diffuse, partially nodular colloid goitre; nodular colloid goitre; goitre with multifocal functional autonomy; non-functioning adenoma; unifocal functional autonomy; Graves' disease). The oxalate concentrations of the samples were mainly dependent on age and gender, which were distributed unequally among the seven diagnostic groups. In thyroid tissue from cases of Graves' disease, however, the concentration of oxalate was remarkably low and statistically different from those of four of the six other groups.