The crystal structure of tin (II) sulphate, SnSO4, was obtained by Rietveld refinement using synchrotron high-resolution powder X-ray diffraction (HRPXRD) data. The structure was refined in space group Pbnm. The unit-cell parameters for SnSO4 are a = 7.12322(1), b = 8.81041(1), c = 5.32809 (I) angstrom, and V = 334.383(1) angstrom(3). The average < Sn-O > [12] distance is 2.9391(4) angstrom. However, the Sn(2+)cation has a pyramidal [3]-coordination to O atoms and the average < Sn-O > [3] = 2.271(1) angstrom. If Sn is considered as [12]-coordinated, SnSO4 has a structure similar to barite, BaSO4, and its structural parameters are intermediate between those of BaSO4 and PbSO4. The tetrahedral SO4 group has an average < Sn-O > [4] = 1.472(1) angstrom in SnSO4. Comparing SnSO4 with the isostructural SrSO4, PbSO4, and BaSO4, several well-defined trends are observed. The radii, rM, of the M2+(=Sr, Pb, Sn, and Ba) cations and average < Sn-O > distances vary linearly with V because of the effective size of the M(2+)cation. Based on the trend for the isostructural sulphates, the average < Sn-O > [12] distance is slightly longer than expected because of the lone pair of electrons on the Sn(2+)cation. (C) 2012 International Centre for Diffraction Data [doi:10.1017/S0885715612000450]