Background and aims: The aim of the present study was to evaluate the clinical presentation, characteristics and post-surgical outcome of non-functioning pituitary macroadenomas (NFPM) in elderly patients. Methods: 27 patients (65–81 years; 13 Males, 14 Females) with NFPM (20–45 mm in diameter) were studied. The symptoms prompting neuroradiological studies were vision alterations in 52%, and dizziness, loss of memory, confusion, headache and depression in 29%; in 19% of patients, the disease was incidentally discovered during computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for head trauma or cerebral is-chemic attacks. Results: Endocrinological evaluation on diagnosis showed global anterior hypopituitarism in 33% and partial hypopituitarism in 37% of patients. Im-munohistochemistry showed signs of neurosecretion in most NFPM (chromogranin-A in 55%, gonadotropins in 19%, ACTH in 3.7%). Ki-67 antigen expression was indicative of low proliferative activity. Surgery was highly effective in improving alterations in vision and com-pressive symptoms, but was unable to restore normal pituitary function in established hypopituitarism in most cases. Eight patients (31%) were free of disease on subsequent MR (follow-up 1–6 years). In 18 (69%) patients, a post-surgical residue was present. Of these, 6 (33%) underwent radiotherapy in the following years, owing to an increase in the volume of the remnants, and six (33%) underwent additional surgical treatment, followed by radiotherapy for further signs of growth in two. In the remaining patients, a small intrasellar remnant was stable on yearly MRI. Conclusions: in elderly patients, the development of hypopituitarism is often overlooked and the initial diagnosis of NFPM may be delayed. This can expose patients to the risks of unrecognized hy-popituitarism and jeopardize post-surgical outcome.