Murine schistosomosis is a widely used experimental model of the human disease. Different methods have been employed to infect mice with Schistosoma mansoni cercariae, such as subcutaneous or intraperitoneal injections, the tail immersion technique, and the use of a metal ring placed on the abdominal skin of anaesthetized animals. An alternative method of infection that requires no anaesthesia and no restraint is to place suckling mice (10 days old) on a Petri dish with a small volume of water containing cercariae. In this study, we compared the penetration and maturation of S. mansoni in mice infected by this alternative method with those noted in mice infected at an older age (45 days) by the tail immersion technique. Besides evaluating the effects of age and method of infection, we also compared the susceptibility of two strains of mice (Swiss Webster (SW) and DBA/2). Mice were exposed to 100 cercariae and worms (by portal–hepatic perfusion) as well as eggs were recovered in the liver and intestines on postinfection (PI) days 35, 55 and 90. Skin penetration was very efficient (about 100%) irrespective of the mouse strain, sex, age and method of infection. Worm and egg recoveries were higher in SW mice at any PI interval, but strain differences tended to be less pronounced on PI day 90. In both strains, recoveries of worms and eggs were clearly higher in mice infected at a younger age (10 days old). This study thus suggests that infection of free-moving suckling mice is a suitable alternative to other methods of infection with S. mansoni.