Abstract The irradiation swelling, creep, and thermal-stress analysis of light-water reactor (LWR) oxide (UO2) fuel elements is analysed. The analysis is based on the basic physical and mathematical assumptions and the experimental data of the fuel and cladding (or canning) materials. In the analysis, the nuclear, physical, metallurgical, and thermo-mechanical properties of the fuel and cladding materials under irradiation environment are examined carefully. The objectives of the paper are mainly (1) to formulate and carry out the irradiation swelling, irradiation creep, and thermal-stress analysis of fuel elements for LWR power reactors, and (2) to develop a computer code which will facilitate the computations for fuel element design, safety analysis, and economic optimization of the power reactors. In a general procedure of the analysis, the irradiation swelling, irradiation creep, temperature distribution, etc. in the fuel and cladding of the oxide fuel elements during the reactor in operation are studied. Some theoretical models and empirical relations (on the basis of accepted experimental data) for irradiation swelling and creep in the fuel and irradiation creep in cladding materials are postulated and developed. Some analytical and empirical relations (based on test results) for heat generation and temperature distribution in the fuel during fuel restructuring are derived. The fuel restructure is, in general, divided into the central void, columnar grain, equiaxed grain, and unaffected grain zones (or regions) after a sufficiently long period for the fuel elements to be irradiated (or operated). From these relations derived for irradiation swelling, irradiation creep, and temperature distribution in the fuel and cladding, together with the well-known strain-stress, incompressibility, compatibility, and stress equilibrium equations, the irradiation swelling, creep, and thermal-stress analysis for the LWR fuel elements can be carried out. From the analytical results obtained, a computer code, ISUNE-2 (which is in the sequence of computer code ISUNE-1 and -1A developed and used previously for liquid-metal fast breeder reactor fuel element design and safety and economic analysis), can be developed. With some reliable experimental data (measured during fuel elements in operation) as input, the computer code may predict various cases of LWR (oxide or carbide) fuel elements in operation. The general scope and resulting contribution of this paper is to provide a realistic analysis and a reliable operating LWR fuel element code for use by nuclear power utilities to predict the fuel element behavior in power reactors. The fuel element design, safety analysis, and economic optimization depend largely on the fuel element behavior in the power reactors.