Redox modification by S-glutathionylation is an expanding field within cell signalling research. However, the methods available for analysis of S-glutathionylated proteins in complex mixtures are not sufficiently accurate to specifically and in a high-throughput manner on a structural level establish the effects of S-glutathionylation on the individual proteins. A method has been developed for rapid identification of the S-glutathionylation sites of proteins in diamide-treated ECV304 cells, through tagging of deglutathionylated proteins with a cysteine-reactive biotin-affinity tag, trypsinisation, avidin-affinity purification of tagged peptides, and subsequent analysis by liquid chromatography and quadrupole time-of-flight tandem mass spectrometry. The method has led to identification of the glutathionylation sites of γ-actin (Cys 217 ), heat shock protein 60 (Cys 447 ), and elongation factor 1-α-1 (Cys 411 ). Further developments of accuracy within the field of peptide-affinity capture and mass spectrometry are discussed.