A total of 1084 surgical procedures was performed during the first 10 years of independence in the small Pacific island nation of Tuvalu. Visiting surgical teams performed 29% of these. Obstetrical and gynaecological operations, eye and abdominal operations counted for more than half of the total number of operations; of the individual operations, cataract extraction, tuba1 ligation and appendicectomy were the most common. After local anaesthesia, epidural, spinal or ketamine anaesthesia, respectively, were performed more often than general anaesthesia. During the 10‐year period, only 12 patients were sent overseas for surgical treatment. Of the estimated 110 patients needing surgical treatment in Tuvalu each year, the great majority can be managed with present facilities. Regular visits by an eye and a plastic surgery team are useful, and a small number of selected patients need surgical treatment overseas. The adequate treatment of surgical emergencies from outer islands in an island community with great distances and poor communications remains the biggest challenge for surgical services in the future. Copyright © 1990, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserved