Introduction: A 65-year-old male with type one diabetes mellitus underwent a pancreas and kidney transplant approximately seven years ago and has received chronic tacrolimus. He presented with subacute dyspnea on exertion, orthopnea, and edema. His background also includes ongoing chronic kidney disease stage 3A, orthostatic hypotension, and spinal stenosis. On exam, he had abdominal and lower extremity swelling. An echocardiogram showed preserved LVEF, concentric hypertrophy, hyperrefractile myocardium, reduced longitudinal strain with apical sparing, and a tiny pericardial effusion. Hypothesis: His echocardiogram indicated an infiltrative process such as amyloidosis or tacrolimus cardiotoxicity or possibly hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Methods: Free light chains and protein studies with mass-fixation demonstrated no monoclonal gammopathy. PYP scan was negative for transthyretin amyloidosis. A cardiac MRI showed patchy subendocardial and midmyocardial delayed gadolinium enhancement, supporting the clinical suspicion for cardiac amyloidosis. With the need to exclude tacrolimus toxicity as well, subsequent endomyocardial biopsy revealed apolipoprotein A-IV-associated cardiac amyloidosis (Figure 1). Results: Apolipoprotein A-IV-associated cardiac amyloidosis occurs in about 0.6% of patients with cardiac amyloid and has classic manifestations of LV outflow obstruction, microvascular disease, and especially renal insufficiency. When these features occur in patients with clinical and imaging findings suggesting cardiac amyloidosis despite negative testing for more common types of amyloidosis, clinicians should proceed with endomyocardial biopsy to evaluate for less common forms. Conclusions: We report a rare case of apolipoprotein A-IV-associated cardiac amyloidosis. This case highlights the need for endomyocardial biopsy when clinical suspicion for cardiac amyloidosis persists despite negative testing.