Background: Toxoplasmosis is a serious and often life-threatening disease in immunodeficient patients. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays allow a rapid diagnosis of Toxoplasma infection by direct detection of the parasite's DNA. To perforin a sensitive, specific, and reliable PCR-based diagnostic test, the availability of pure DNA lacking PCR inhibitors as well as a rapid and easy-to-perforin DNA extraction protocol are essential. The aim of the present study was to compare four DNA extraction methods for the detection of T gondii on cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) using the PCR technology. Material/Methods: Four DNA extraction methods (boiling, lysis + centrifugation, the miniMAG commercial system, and phenol-chloroform) were compared with respect to the time of completion, the manual labor involved, and PCR analytical sensitivity for the detection of T. gondii in CSE The optimal DNA extraction method for the detection of the parasite was evaluated in CSF front 43 AIDS patients using the nest-PCR B1 assay. Results: According to the time for completion, labor, and PCR analytical sensitivity, the lysis + centrifugation protocol proved to be a simple, efficient, and economical in-house procedure to recover the T.gondii DNA present in the CSF. The diagnostic sensitivity of nest-PCR, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) criteria, was 86.3% and the diagnostic specificity was 100%. Conclusions: We report a simple, rapid, reproducible, and economical in-house method for Y.gondii DNA extraction from CSF. This method is recommended for diagnostic PCR of Toxoplasmic encephalitis (TE) in places with economical shortage.