Gastrointestinal leiomyomas often occur in the esophagus, colon, and rectum, but are very rare in the stomach. The patient was referred to Jeju national university medical center for the treatment of a left adrenal tumor diagnosed 5 years ago. She had a long history of repeated left flank pain, nausea, and abdominal distension for the last few years. Annual follow-up computed tomography scan showed a no changed 5×5.5-cm sized multiloculated left adrenal cystic lesion. Laboratory tests revealed that the basal levels of plasma adrenocorticotropin, cortisol, aldosterone, renin, testosterone, adrenaline, noradrenaline, and dopamine were normal findings. The preoperative diagnosis was a left nonfunctioning adrenal neoplasm with symptom of discomfort. However, the tumor revealed as an exophytic growing leiomyoma with cystic changes of a stomach by surgery. The mass was found at the posterior wall of the fundus and about 5-cm-sized mass. Resection of the tumor was performed using laparoscopy. The pathologic diagnosis revealed a gastrointestinal leiomyoma with a benign cystic lesion lined by respiratory epithelium with an old hemorrhage and chronic gastritis. The patient had no evidence of recurrence during the 12-month follow-up. Gastric leiomyoma is unfamiliar to the usual urologists. It needs to take gastric leiomyoma into account if the left adrenal tumor is close to the stomach. Herein, we report the case of a 44-year-old woman with gastrointestinal leiomyoma misdiagnosing as a nonfunctioning adrenal tumor.