Hypercalcemia is a frequent complication in chronic hemodialysis (CHD) patients. A rare cause of this condition is sarcoidosis, and has only been reported 6 times in CHD. Herein, we report on 3 cases of sarcoidosis-related hypercalcemia in CHD patients: an overt case, a probable case, and a recurrence of pre-dialysis sarcoidosis. Hypercalcemia is a frequent complication in chronic hemodialysis patients: it is often related to uncontrollable secondary hyperparathyroidism or to the inappropriate use of calcium phosphate binders, 1alpha-hydroxylated vitamin D metabolites, high dialysate calcium concentrations, or to aluminium-related bone disease [Uach and Bover 1996]. However, other rare causes should also be considered, such as multiple myeloma, non-Hodgkin lymphoma [Uach and Bover 1996], vitamin A intoxication [Fishbane et al. 1995], or granulomatous diseases such as sarcoidosis. The latter has only been described in a total of 6 hemodialysis patient reports [Barbour et al. 1981, Barnard et al. 2002, Herrero et al. 1998, Kalantar-Zadeh et al. 1994, Kuwae et al. 2003, Naito et al. 1999]. In the present paper, we report on 3 cases of sarcoidosis-related hypercalcemia in chronic hemodialysis patients with 3 different patterns, i.e. overt sarcoidosis, probable sarcoidosis, and recurrence of pre-dialysis sarcoidosis.