Keywords• HPV • immune check points • immunotherapy • oral cancers • PD/PDL-1 HPV-infection related oral cancers are on the rise [2]. Conventional therapies (surgery, radiation and prophylactic vaccines) and some proposed nonconventional therapies (natural and synthetic antioxidants)-based treatments have limitations. In the light of recent advancement of immune checkpoints and their inhibitor molecule related cancer immunotherapies, we present updated information on the current status of PD-1/PD-L1 therapies in HPV mediated oral carcinogenesis. We limit the scope to oral carcinogenesis.Oral squamous cell carcinoma is the sixth most common cancer that accounts for almost 5% of all malignancies worldwide [1,2]. It is predominately attributed to smoking and alcohol, but a subset has been demonstrated to contain anogenital HPV infections. Many studies have established that the high-risk HPVs, especially HPV type 16 (HPV16) are etiologically related to a subset of oral cancer cell [1][2][3]. Nonsmokers with less median age, harboring wild type p53 and wild type p16, well-differentiated epithelium and better survival/good prognosis are some of the best identified exclusive characteristic features of HPV infected oral cancers. After surgical options and radiation therapies in platinum-refractory oral cancers, traditionally EGFR-based monoclonal antibodies are preferred by clinicians as a standard treatment regimen. But as usual, nonspecific targeting has been identified as one of the major problems, warranting the need for newer approaches such as checkpoint inhibitor-based immunotherapies.Even after four decades of HPV research, there are no specific therapies available for the effective treatment of HPV. However, virus-like particle (the major HPV virion protein L1)-based two prophylactic vaccines: quadrivalent Gardasil (HPV16/18/6/11) and bivalent Cervix (HPV16/18) are available. In 2014, the US FDA has approved a nonavalent vaccine against nine HPV types ( HPV6,11,16,18, 31, 33, 45, 52 and 58) but these vaccines are not commercialized well in developing countries [4][5][6].