The histological intraepidermal characteristics considered to be specific to dysplastic nevi (radial extension, lentiginous and disordered nest proliferations, cytological atypia or dyskaryosis) were investigated in a series of 114 acquired nevi showing various clinical appearances in an attempt to establish whether dysplastic nevi can be considered a homogeneous class of lesions, clearly distinct from common nevi. On the basis of the distribution of investigated architectural features, found singly or variously associated, the examined lesions were divided into 5 groups, showing an increasing incidence of dyskaryosis. Results suggest that acquired nevi, rather than two distinct classes (common and dysplastic nevi), form a histological spectrum of lesions, within which the border between lesions implying and not implying an increased melanoma risk cannot be objectively fixed.