Yttrium-doped BaZrO 3 (BZY) was processed by a simple yet effective chemical synthesis route that yielded perfectly spherical particles. The particle size was found to decrease with increasing molar concentration of cations in the solution. Thus, the process offered a great ease of controlling the particle size as well. The close control over morphology and size can provide an opportunity of tuning the properties of such particles. The average particle size as obtained from high-resolution scanning electron microscopy (HR-SEM) was 243, 206, 149, and 79 nm at 0.2, 0.5, 0.8, and 1 M concentration, respectively. At a processing temperature of 60°C, the undesirable phases, BaCO 3 and Zr 1-x Y x O 2 , were present along with BZY even after calcination at 600°C, and it took a very long processing time (160 min) for complete phase formation. The BZY phase formed within 45 min at a reaction temperature of 90°C and yielded phase pure powders on calcination at the same temperature (600°C). The d-spacing (2.98 Å ) obtained from the lattice fringes in high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HR-TEM) confirmed the cubic perovskite phase of BaZrO 3 . The average crystallite size calculated from XRD analysis coupled with the TEM observations revealed that each spherical particle consists of only few crystallites.