To evaluate the usefulness of a newly designed multifunctional coil catheter for stent placement in patients with upper gastrointestinal tract strictures. Constructed in our research laboratory, the coil catheter was used in 202 consecutive patients with malignant (n = 191) or corrosive (n = 11) upper gastrointestinal tract strictures. The coil catheter was made of a stainless-steel coil (1.3-mm inner diameter, 1.8-mm outer diameter), a 0.4-mm nitinol wire, a polyolefin tube, and a hemostasis valve. Usefulness of the coil catheter was evaluated based on whether the coil catheter could pass the stricture over a guide wire and whether measurement of the stricture length was possible while the guide wire was in place. The passage of the coil catheter over a guide wire beyond the stricture was technically successful and well tolerated in 199 of 202 patients (99%). Negotiation of a guide wire or a coil catheter through the stricture of the stomach (n = 2) or duodenum (n = 1) under fluoroscopic guidance failed in three patients. In two of these three patients, it was possible to negotiate a guide wire and a coil catheter under combined endoscopic and fluoroscopic guidance; it was not possible in the third. There were no procedure-related complications. The newly designed multifunctional coil catheter is useful in stent placement in patients with upper gastrointestinal tract strictures.