Metastatic lymph nodal number (LNN) is associated with the survival of nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC); however, counting multiple nodes is cumbersome. To explore LNN threshold and evaluate its use in risk stratification and induction chemotherapy (IC) indication. Retrospective. A total of 792 radiotherapy-treated NPC patients (N classification: N0 182, N1 438, N2 113, N3 59; training group: 396, validation group: 396; receiving IC: 390). T1-, T2- and postcontrast T1-weighted fast spin echo MRI at 1.5 or 3.0 T. Nomogram with (model B) or without (model A) LNN was constructed to evaluate the 5-year overall (OS), distant metastasis-free (DMFS), and progression-free survival (PFS) for the group as a whole and N1 stage subgroup. High- and low-risk groups were divided (above vs below LNN- or model B-threshold); their response to IC was evaluated among advanced patients in stage III/IV. Maximally selected rank, univariate and multivariable Cox analysis identified the optimal LNN threshold and other variables. Harrell's concordance index (C-index) and 2-fold cross-validation evaluated discriminative ability of models. Matched-pair analysis compared survival outcomes of adding IC or not. A P value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Median follow-up duration was 62.1 months. LNN ≥ 4 was independently associated with decreased 5-year DMFS, OS, and PFS in entire patients or N1 subgroup. Compared to model A, model B (adding LNN, LNN ≥ 4 vs <4) presented superior C-indexes in the training (0.755 vs 0.727) and validation groups (0.676 vs 0.642) for discriminating DMFS. High-risk patients benefited from IC with improved post-IC response and OS, but low-risk patients did not (P=0.785 and 0.690, respectively). LNN ≥ 4 is an independent risk stratification factor of worse survival in entire or N1 staging NPC patients. LNN ≥ 4 or the associated nomogram has potential to identify high-risk patients requiring IC. 4 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: 4.