The ventral root L5 of neonatal and adult rats has been used in many experimental studies on ganglionic C-fibers. Since the normal presence of such axons in L5 roots from animals of different ages is unknown, the results of these studies cannot be appropriately interpreted. In the present study we examine L5 ventral roots from developing and aging rats in this respect. Electron microscopic examination revealed that C-fibers occur in neonatal roots. The adult proportion has been established at day 30. Immunohistochemical analysis showed that thin ganglionic fibers with substance P/calcitonin gene-related peptide- or tyrosine hydroxylase-like immunoreactivity in the L5 root and the spinal pia mater seem to increase postnatally from low levels at birth. In roots from aged rats, myelinated fibers with a variety of aberrant features occur in normal numbers. The occurrence of unmyelinated axons is elevated. The increased presence of fibers with calcitonin gene-related peptide- or tyrosine hydroxylase-like immunoreactivity in aged roots indicates that the extra unmyelinated fibers may represent motor sprouts and sympathetic fibers, respectively. We conclude that the rat ventral root L5 contains a variable number of putative sensory and sympathetic axons at all ages.