Leukaemia inhibitory factor (LIF) is a pleiotropic cytokine previously demonstrated to be essential for blastocyst implantation in mice. Samples of endometrium from normal cyclic women throughout the menstrual cycle were tested for LIF messenger RNA by Northern blot analysis and the corresponding protein was localised immunohistochemically with a polyclonal antibody to LIF. Western blot analysis detected a 45 kDa LIF protein in an extract from late secretory tissue. The expression of LIF messenger RNA transcript was detected only during the mid and late secretory phases of the cycle after day 20. Immunoreactive LIF was observed in all human endometrial samples. In the stroma there were moderate to high levels of immunohistochemical staining throughout the cycle with considerable variation between individuals but no cyclical variation. Epithelial staining, both luminal and glandular, was also present throughout the cycle but this was relatively low in the proliferative phase and strongest in the mid to late secretory phases. The marked cyclical changes of immunoreactive LIF in the human endometrial epithelium suggest a paracrine/autocrine role for LIF in endometrial function. Whether LIF is essential for implantation in the human remains to be established. Journal of Endocrinology (1996) 148, 95–102