a b s t r a c tWe present the optical tomography of the probability density of microcavity polaritons, confined in three dimensions by cylindrical traps of various sizes. Collecting the photoluminescence emitted by the quasimodes under continuous nonresonant laser excitation, we reconstruct a three dimensional mapping of the photoluminescence, from which we can extract the spatial distribution of the confined states at any energy. We discuss the impact of the confinement shape and size on the probability density patterns. Microvavity polaritons are half-light half-matter quasiparticles, arising from the strong coupling between the electromagnetic mode of a semiconductor microcavity and a quantum well (QW) exciton [1]. The in-plane dispersion of the polaritons is dominated by their photonic component [2], and provides them with an effective mass 10 4 smaller than the free electron mass. Microcavity polaritons can therefore be confined in the in-plane directions by traps with sizes in the micrometer range. While the imaging of carriers confined in semiconductor heterostructures is generally forbidden due to the small confinement size, probability density (PD) patterns of polaritons confined in micrometer size traps can be accessed by standard optical means [3,4].We previously engineered a GaAs/AlAs microcavity with a single embedded InGaAs QW, featuring traps for the exciton-polaritons. These traps consist in quasi-circular mesas which were etched on the cavity spacer to locally enlarge the cavity length, thus providing a cylindrical confining potential for the photonic modes. More details about the sample and its fabrication are given in Ref. [5].