Objective: To assess the iodine status of New Zealand schoolchildren. Design: A proportionate to population size school-based cluster survey was used to randomly select children from two cities. The indicators used to assess iodine status were urinary iodine, as determined in a casual urine sample, and thyroid volume, as measured by ultrasonography. A qualitative food frequency questionnaire designed to ascertain frequency of consumption over the previous 3 months of foods or food groups that are good sources of dietary iodine, including iodized salt, was administered to each child. Setting: Dunedin and Wellington, New Zealand. Participants: Three-hundred children aged 8 -10 y from 30 schools. Results: The median urinary iodine concentration of the children was 6.6 mg=dl (interquartile range, 4.5 -9.1). The percentage of children who had urinary iodine levels less than 5 mg=dl was 31.4 (95% confidence interval (CI), 24.2 -38.6). Comparison of thyroid volume with 2001 World Health Organization age=sex-specific and age=BSA-specific cut-off values resulted in a goitre prevalence of 11.3% (95% CI, 7.6 -15.1) and 12.0% (95% CI, 7.9 -16.1), respectively. Almost 30% of the children's caregivers did not use iodized salt in cooking and 51% of the children did not use iodized salt at the table.