Background: Regional lymph node metastasis (RLNM) has been reported to be a prognostic factor for poor survival outcomes of bone sarcoma. However, studies about risk factors for RLNM of bone sarcoma are extremely rare, and the outcome of such patients remains to be explored. We aimed to identify risk factors for RLNM of bone sarcoma and conduct survival analysis for patients with bone sarcoma with RLNM.Methods: A total of 10,641 patients confirmed of malignant bone sarcomas from 1983 to 2014 were identified from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database, with 311 being regional lymph node positive. Logistic regression analysis was used to identify risk factors for RLNM, while the Cox proportional hazards model and the Fine and Gray's regression model were used for survival analysis.Results: The proportion of RLNM was 6.0% in Ewing sarcoma, 2.5% in osteosarcoma and 1.1% in chondrosarcoma. Other bone tumors together had a RLNM rate of 4.2%. Risk factors identified by the logistic regression analysis for RLNM were male patients, primary tumor site, tumor type and size.The multivariate Cox regression analysis suggested age, race, distant metastasis, tumor type and surgical treatment to be prognostic factors for the overall survival of patients with RLNM. Taking non-cancerspecific death as a competing risk, however, we found only age between 30-60 years [sub-distribution hazard ratio (SHR), 1.528, 95% CI, 1.028-2.271; P=0.02], distant metastasis (SHR, 2.418, 95% CI, 1.682-3.474; P<0.001) and surgery treatment (SHR, 0.493, 95% CI, 0.339-0.718; P<0.001) remained significant for the cancer-specific survival in the Fine and Gray's regression model. Conclusions: Predictive factors for RLNM of bone sarcoma are sex, tumor site, type and size. In the presence of RKNM, only age, distant metastasis and surgery treatment are prognostic factors for the outcome of patients with bone sarcoma.