The variable clinical severity of mucous membrane pemphigoid (MMP) often leads to diagnostic and therapeutic delays. To describe the characteristics of a large cohort of patients with MMP. A retrospective review of clinical and diagnostic characteristics as well as treatment responses in 145 patients with MMP. Monosite involvement was seen in 41.4% and multisite involvement in 58.6% of the patients. The oral mucosa was affected in 86.9% of the patients, followed by the ocular mucosa (30.3%), skin (26.2%), genital mucosa (25.5%), nasal mucosa (23.4%), and pharyngeal and/or laryngeal mucosa (17.2%). Ocular disease developed during the disease course in 41.7% of patients with initially other mucosal site involvement. The malignancy rate was significantly higher in patients with autoantibodies against laminin-332 than in patients with MMP without laminin-332 autoantibodies (35.3% vs 10.9%, respectively; P=.007). Systemic immunosuppressive or immunomodulatory therapy was administered to 77.1% of the patients, mainly to patients with multisite (P<.001), ocular (P<.001), and pharyngeal and laryngeal involvement (P=.002). The remaining patients (22.9%) received topical therapy. Adverse events were frequently reported. Retrospective design. Patients with MMP present with a heterogeneous clinical presentation, and new symptoms may develop during the disease course. Cancer screening should be considered for patients with MMP and, in particular, for those with autoantibodies against laminin-332.