According to the literature, cerebellopontine angle tumors cause secondary trigeminal neuralgia and other symptoms of neurovascular compression in 1-9.9% of cases. We present a 58-year-old patient with left-sided secondary trigeminal neuralgia caused by ipsilateral posterior petrous meningioma. Stereotactic irradiation was followed by effective tumor growth control. However, residual trigeminal pain paroxysms significantly reduced the quality of life and required subsequent microsurgery. Trigeminal facial pain regressed after total resection of tumor. Considering this clinical case, we would like to discuss several issues: follow-up of meningioma requiring radiosurgery, course of secondary trigeminal neuralgia in a patient with apical petrous meningioma, characteristics of pain before and after radiosurgery, the best treatment option for these patients. Stereotactic radiosurgery seems unreasonable for CPA tumors with secondary trigeminal neuralgia. Indeed, persistent pain is possible even after tumor shrinkage. Moreover, primary stereotactic irradiation significantly complicates subsequent resection of tumor.