Background. Masked arterial hypertension (MAH) is associated with asymptomatic injury of both heart and kidneys. Links between MAH and arterial stiffness are unclear, with debates ongoing on their mutual causative relation. Research into the arterial stiffness contribution to MAH development is a perspective area of cardiology.Objectives. The MAH risk assessment as a condition of arterial stiffness in patients at cardiovascular risk (CVR) without a verified cardiovascular disease (CVD).Methods. A single-stage screening observational study included a total of 92 CVR patients without a verified cardiovascular disease. The trial conducted general clinical examination, daily blood pressure monitoring (DBPM), volumetric sphygmoplethysmography with reading cardio-ankle vascular index (CAVI1), aortic and carotid artery pulse wave velocity (PWV), carotid-femoral PWV (CFV) and augmentation index.Results. Patients were assigned in two cohorts by MAH presence, the primary MAH (58; 63.0%) and normal BP in DBPM (34; 37.0% patients) cohorts. The cohorts did not discord by age, major CVR factors, comorbidity or clinical profile. Men prevailed over women in the MAH cohort (p = 0.028). The cohorts had similar CFV, aortic PWV and augmentation index. Carotid PWV was higher in the MAH cohort both in mean values and elevation rate (p = 0.002 and p = 0.035, respectively). OR and HR were 3.29 and 2.35 (95% CI for OR 1.08–10.49, HR 1.05– 6.02), respectively. MAH was associated with increased CAVI1 for mean values and CAVI1 > 8 incidence rate (p = 0.010 and 0.049, respectively); OR 3.29 (95% CI 1.00–11.41), HR 2.46 (95% CI 1.00–7.10). Correlation analysis revealed a moderate direct dependence between the MAH presence and elevation rate of C-PWV (Q = 0.53) and CAVI1 > 8 (Q = 0.53).Conclusion. The risk of MAH development in CVR patients is both gender and arterial stiffness-dependent. MAH development is associated with increased CAVI1 and carotid PWV.