Surface acoustic wave (SAW) devices based on polycrystalline diamond have recently achieved success as microwave filters. This is due in part to the large acoustic wavelength of diamond at microwave frequencies, a consequence of its high surface wave velocity, and the resulting ability to use photolithography for transducer fabrication. Since nanocrystalline diamond has a smooth surface and is elastically isotropic, it may offer considerable advantages over thick films of polycrystalline diamond. We have studied the propagation of surface waves on nanocrystalline diamond prepared by microwave plasma chemical vapor deposition (CVD) on silicon substrates. Films were synthesized on 75-mm Si wafers using input gas mixtures consisting of Ar with 1% CH4 and 0–4% H2. The deposition parameters studied included pressure, 2.45 GHz microwave power, and total gas flow rate. Film thicknesses up to 23 μm were produced. SAW transducers were fabricated by photolithography on as-grown nanocrystalline diamond surfaces covered with a 1–3 μm overlayer of oriented polycrystalline piezoelectric ZnO prepared by reactive dc sputtering. The device response was analyzed with frequency and time domain methods. The resonant frequencies of the devices agree with the results of numerical solutions for sound propagation in layered media. Several surface acoustic modes exist at frequencies between 0.5 and 1 GHz that exhibit appreciable dispersion. We have propagated surface waves in nanocrystalline diamond over distances varying from 0.1 to 3 mm with low attenuation. For a film with mean grain size of approximately 30 nm, the SAW velocity is similar to test devices on thick polycrystalline diamond. We conclude that nanocrystalline diamond is a highly attractive substrate material for SAW devices, possessing the high sound velocity of diamond but requiring less materials processing.