Osteosarcomas of the jaw frequently have chondroblastic differentiation, causing confusion with chondrosarcomas. Clinicopathologic features and results of treatment were analyzed for a series of 56 patients (27 males and 29 females from 1.5 to 88 years of age) with chondrosarcoma of jaw and facial bones. Twelve patients (21.4%) were younger than 20 years. The major symptom was nasal obstruction or a painless mass; the median interval from the first symptom until initial treatment was 1 year. Of the 56 chondrosarcomas, 25(44.6%) involved the alveolar portion of the maxilla and maxillary sinus; 23 (41.1%) involved the nasal septum, ethmoid, and sphenoid; 6 (10.7%) involved the mandible; and 2 (3.6%) involved the nasal tip. Of the 19 patients with radiographic studies, 15 (78.9%) had an expanding soft tissue mass with varied matrix calcification and destruction of bone and 2 had a purely lytic lesion. The lesion was difficult to assess in the two others. Most tumors had a lobulated growth pattern of hyaline cartilage. Hypercellularity, nuclear pleomorphism, and binucleation were common features. Forty-three tumors were grade 1, 13 were grade 2, and none were grade 3. Modalities of treatment were known for 51 of the 56 patients. Forty-six patients (90.2%) had surgical treatment, 2 (3.9%) had combination radiation therapy and chemotherapy, 1 (2%) had radiation therapy alone, and 2 (3.9%) had biopsy only. Follow-up adequate for analysis was obtained for 42 patients. Of these, 14 (33.3%) had local recurrence; uncontrolled recurrence developed in 9 (21.4%) patients. No distant metastases were documented. Overall actuarial survival at 5, 10, and 15 years was 80.7%, 65.3%, and 56%, respectively. Survival was analyzed for location, size, and histologic grade of tumor. No statistically significant differences were found. Chondrosarcomas of the jaw and facial bones are extremely rare, locally aggressive tumors.