Simple SummaryGlioblastoma is the most common primary brain malignancy diagnosed in adults, and, despite standard of care treatment, it carries a devastating prognosis with median overall survival of 16–21 months. Advance care planning and palliative care services utilization are important for this patient population due to their cancer and neurocognitive symptoms. We present a systematic review on prevalence of advance care planning, end-of-life services utilization, and experiences among adults with glioblastoma. The findings from our review serve as a foundation for future additional works, particularly prospective studies, that may address gaps in palliative care resource utilization and disparities in advance care planning for adult glioblastoma patients.Glioblastoma (GBM) has a median overall survival of 16–21 months. As patients with GBM suffer concurrently from terminal cancer and a disease with progressive neurocognitive decline, advance care planning (ACP) and palliative care (PC) are critical. We conducted a systematic review exploring published literature on the prevalence of ACP, end-of-life (EOL) services utilization (including PC services), and experiences among adults with GBM. We searched from database inception until 20 December 2020. Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews guidelines were followed. Included studies were assessed for quality using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. The 16 articles were all nonrandomized studies conducted in six countries with all but two published in 2014 or later. ACP documentation varied from 4–55%, PC referral was pursued in 39–40% of cases, and hospice referrals were made for 66–76% of patients. Hospitalizations frequently occurred at the EOL with 20–56% of patients spending over 25% of their overall survival time hospitalized. Many GBM patients do not pursue ACP or have access to PC. There is a dearth of focused and high-quality studies on ACP, PC, and hospice use among adults with GBM. Prospective studies that address these and additional aspects related to EOL care, such as healthcare costs and inpatient supportive care needs, are needed.