Cutaneous metastases of thyroid carcinoma are infrequent and, when present, are usually located in the vicinity of a widespread primary tumor. Breast metastases from these tumors are even less common. We report the case of a 64-year-old female with a toxic multinodular goiter in whom a fine-needle biopsy, performed in 1985 at the age of 52, was suggestive of papillary carcinoma of the thyroid. Total thyroidectomy for a papillary carcinoma, follicular variant, was performed in 1988. Four months after surgery, a cutaneous metastasis was discovered in the right thigh. Surgical excision of this lesion followed by treatment with radioactive iodine decreased serum Tg levels from 7495 to 3.3 mu g/l. Under suppressive therapy with L-thyroxine, serum Tg remained undetectable for the next 4 years. Then, serum Tg levels rose to 3.9-5.6 mu g/l and a second cutaneous metastasis was removed from the abdominal wall. The patient was again treated with radioactive iodine and the post-treatment whole-body scan did not show any area of increased uptake of the radionuclide. However, serum Tg levels under suppression with L-thyroxine remained elevated at 4-20 mu g/l for the next 2 years. In August 1995, a 1.5 cm nodule was found in the right breast. Cytological examination was suggestive of a breast metastasis from thyroid. carcinoma and the lesion was removed by enucleation. This proved to be a metastasis from a papillary carcinoma of the thyroid. Elevated (19-44 mu g/l) serum Tg levels persisted postoperatively. A third cutaneous metastasis was revealed by I-131 scintigraphy in the right buttock and surgically removed in December 1996. Serum Tg levels have remained undetectable since then. To the best of our knowledge, this is a unique case of a papillary carcinoma of the thyroid with a propensity to metastasize only to the skin and breast during a follow-up of 11 years.