Objective. To estimate and to compare against other series, the overall survival time (OST) in patients with diagnosis of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), cared for and followed-up at a tertiary-care hospital in Merida, Yucatan, Mexico, between January 1995 to December 1999. Material and me-thods. Clinical records of 110 patients aged 14 years or older, were identified and reviewed. Age, sex, ALL subtypes, follow-up time, OST and mortality rates were the analyzed variables. Inferential statistics, including parametric and nonparame-tric tests and its 95% confidence intervals (95%CI), were used when appropriate. Six months periods, the median survival time (MST), and the five-years OST using Kaplan-Meier methods (K-M) for ALL as a group and for its subtypes, were calculated. Results. The median age of ALL patients was 19 years. Male gender was more affected (68%) than female gender. One to 55 months was the followed-up time, being the fo-llowed-up mean time 16.9 +/- 12.1 months (95%CI 14.6 to 19.18). The SMT (K-M) was 22.8 months, although 12 months, 55 months and sixty months OST was 70%, 11% and zero percent, respectively, being during all the followed-up time always unfavorable to male gender. Mortality rate was 53%, and male was again the most affected one. L2-ALL was the most frequent subtype, having the least mortality rate (38%) between subtypes (p = 0.012) because its OST was better than for L1 and L3 subtypes. Conclusions. In ALL adult patients, mortality rate was higher having 0% OST, at 60 months.