Abstract Introduction Atrial Fibrillation (AF) causes 15% of ischaemic strokes. The National Clinical Guideline for Stroke recommends at least 24 hours of cardiac monitoring and a longer duration if cardio-embolic stroke is suspected. The British Heart Rhythm Society suggests up to 72 hours of cardiac monitoring. Currently, there is little data on the use of telemetry in detecting AF in acute strokes. Our study aims to evaluate the detection rate of new onset AF in acute stroke with telemetry and to determine if there was any correlation between the duration of telemetry and the detection rate of AF. Method All patients with ischaemic stroke who were admitted to stroke ward over a 3-month period were retrospectively analysed. Exclusion criteria were patients who were known to have AF, had new AF on admission electrocardiogram, patients receiving palliative care, patients who were discharged home early without having a telemetry and patients with missing records. Results 61 patients met the inclusion criteria and 5 (8.2%) had AF on telemetry. Two patients had AF on day 1, one on day 2 and two on day 3. All of these patients were anticoagulated. The duration of telemetry ranged between 1- 19 days however no AF was detected beyond the third day of this study. Conclusions AF was detected in 8% of patients with ischaemic stroke within the first 72 hours of admission. Among the patients in whom AF was detected, 5% were detected between 24 hours and 72 hours of admission. Studies (EMBRACE and CRYSTAL trials) have shown that prolonged cardiac monitoring (30 days and 6 months to a year respectively) resulted in higher detection rates of AF. This study suggests that patients with ischaemic stroke should be monitored for at least 72 hours due to a higher detection rate of AF.