Cartilage, being highly aqueous, is difficult to preserve for electron microscopy without artefacts. Microwave-enhanced fixation is suggested as a standard method for block samples of this material, with dimensions of up to 12 x 7 x 3 mm. Cartilage samples from the tibial plateau of adult rabbits were fixed by conventional, cryo- or microwave-enhanced fixation. Constant or cyclical microwave irradiation of samples, immersed in fixatives, was carried out to varying final solution temperatures. Microwave-enhanced fixation and staining is shown to be both rapid and reproducible, giving fine structural preservation. Below 323 K microwave fixation always gave excellent preservation of the fine structure within seconds. At higher temperatures thermal artefacts were introduced. In this study the microwave-enhanced fixation is equal in quality to the test conventional immersion fixation and is nearly as fast as cryo-preservation. It provides a standardized, reproducible fixation for morphological studies on cartilage with good process control.