Objective: To determine the results of conservative surgery for upper urinary tract urothelial tumours. Patients and Methods: Front 1986 to 1997, 352 patients were treated in the Belgrade urology clinic for upper urinary tract urothelial tumour 54 patients (15.3%) were treated by conservative surgery. The sex ratio was 1.3 men for 1 woman. The mean age was 63 years. In most cases, the tumour was situated in the ureter. Conservative surgery was performed oil principle in 60% of patients for a small isolated lesion (solitary low-stage, low-grade tumour). In contrast, in about 40% of cases, conservative surgery was performed by necessity due to the presence of bilateral tumours, a solitary kidney or renal failure related to Balkan nephropathy. The median follow-up was 67.3 months (range: 6 months-14 years). Results: 15.8% of patients developed a local recurrence during the follow-up period. The risk of recurrence was higher when conservative surgery was performed for indications of necessity than when it was performed on principle (21.7% versus 11.8%), but the difference was not statistically significant (c2 test, t test). The stage and grade of differentiation were identified as the most significant predictive factors for the risk of local recurrence. The overall 5-year survival rate was 67% with more favourable results in the case of conservative surgery performed on principle compared conservative surgery by necessity (72% versus 60%). The difference between these results was not statistically significant, but a statistically significant difference was observed for tumour stage and grade (grade III versus grade I and II, pT3 versus pT1, pT2). The 5-year survival probability was 68.5%. Recurrence was most likely to occur during the early postoperative course, as 81.56% occurred during the first 18 months. Conclusion: Urothelial tumours can be managed conservatively. However, the risk of recurrence is directly correlated with the tumour stage and grade, with a high level of statistical significance, and with the type of indication for conservative surgery performed, but with no statistically significant difference.