Although the current clinical guideline of diagnostic criteria for the complex regional pain syndrome I (CRPS I) is a landmark endeavour to define this complex condition it does not prioritise its most important clinical manifestations.We set out to obtain an expert agreed priority list of diagnostic and follow-up parameters in the diagnosis and management of CRPS I.A two round Delphi survey: We asked international experts to list (first round) and weight (second round) parameters (scale 1–10) they believed to be relevant in diagnosis and follow-up. Median ratings and interquartile ranges (IQR) were calculated. Rates ⩾7 and IQR ⩽3 depicted important and expert agreed parameters.Thirty-two diagnostic and 23 follow-up listings and ratings of 13 experts were available for analysis. In three domains (clinical presentation, further examinations and follow-up) experts agreed on the following parameters, pain (10; 9–10) with its subcategories hyperesthesia (7; 5–8) hyperalgesia (8; 8–8) and allodynia (8; 7–10), signs with oedema (9; 8–10) and colour change (8; 5–8) and mobility with its categories motor change (7; 5–8) and decreased range of motion (8; 8–8). The experts agreed that no further examinations were necessary for diagnosis (10; 8–10). The agreed important follow-up parameter was clinical course (10; 8–10) with its categories decrease in pain (8; 8–9) and hyperalgesia (8; 6–8), decreased oedema (8; 7–10) and improvements in motor function (10; 8–10) and strength (8; 6–9).This expert survey conveys an agreed set of relevant diagnostic parameters of CRPS I and proposes that in follow-up examinations treatment success should be based on restoration of those manifestations.