SuperPlasticity in a powder-metallurgy TiAl alloy with a metastable microstructure has been studied. Samples were tested at temperatures ranging from 650 to 11OO"C,and at strain rate ranging from 1~to lfi srl. An elongation value of over 300% was obtained at a strain rate of 2 x l(ks s-l and at a temperature as low as 800°C, which is close to the ductile-to-brittle-transition temperature. This is in contrast to the prior major observations of superplastic behaviors in TiAl in which typical temperatures of 1000°C have usually been required for superplasticity. It is proposed that the occurrence of superplasticity at 800°C in the present alloy is caused by the presence of a B2 phase. During superplastic deformation (grain boundary sliding), the soft P grains accommodate sliding strains to reduce the propensity for cavitation at grain triple junctions and, thus, delays the fracture process.The final microstructure consists of stable, equiaxed y+ a2 grains.