Cushing’s syndrome is the set of clinical manifestations secondary to a chronic excess of glucocorticoids. Bilateral macronodular adrenal hyperplasia with subclinical cortisol secretion is the most common, but its prevalence remains unknown. We describe a case of bilateral macronodular adrenal hyperplasia. This is a 36-year-old female patient who had been consulting for secondary amenorrhea and developing asthenia for 4 months. The clinical examination noted an overweight patient with high blood pressure, facio-trunk obesity, hirsutism and purple stretch marks in the abdomen and thighs. Biologically, hypokalemia at 2.9 meq/l (3.5 - 5.4), normal calcemia at 90 mg/l (85 - 104), fasting blood sugar was 0.84 g/l (0.7 - 1), the tests for minute, low and high dexamethasone suppression test revealed insufficient suppression of cortisol. The cortisoluria collected from the second day to the third day of the high dexamethasone suppression test was at 186 μg/24 h (<60), the ACTH (Pg/ml) was undetectable (6.4 - 49.8). The diagnosis of an independent adrenocorticotrophin (ACTH) Cushing syndrome was made and the adrenal CT scan revealed bilateral macronodular hyperplasia. A bilateral adrenalectomy was performed and a complete remission of Cushing syndrome was achieved. We prescribed to her, hydrocortisone 20 mg/day and alpha-fludrocortisone 25 to 50 μg/day, This medical observation showed that macro-nodular adrenal hyperplasia with overt Cushing syndrome can occur in the third decade of life. Bilateral adrenalectomy has resulted in a complete cure for Cushing’s syndrome, but may be fraught with complications.