Accumulating evidence suggests that short-course (less than or equal to5 days, less than or equal to3 days for azithromycin) antimicrobial therapy may be at least as effective as and, in some cases, may be more effective than traditional longer (10- to 14-day) therapies. In group A beta-haemolytic streptococcal tonsillopharyngitis, short-course therapy with 6 days of amoxicillin, 4-5 days of a variety of cephalosporins and 5 days of clarithromycin modified-release and telithromycin are all reasonable alternatives to traditional 10-day penicillin therapy. Short-course (i.e. 3-day) azithromycin therapy is not recommended because of suboptimal clinical and bacteriological results compared with penicillin therapy, unless the dosage is doubled from 10 to 20 mg/kg/day for all 3 days. In uncomplicated acute suppurative otitis media, single-dose intramuscular ceftriaxone or 3- to 5-day short-course oral antimicrobial therapy should be effective in the majority (greater than or equal to80%) of patients. However, more research is clearly needed in the subpopulations of children <2 years of age and in those with unresponsive/recurrent disease, since short-course therapy may not be successful in the majority of these patients. In sinusitis, most short-course therapy data have involved maxillary disease in adult patients. Regimens have included 3 days of azithromycin or cotrimoxazole (trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole) or 5 days of cefpodoxime, telithromycin, gatifloxacin, gemifloxacin or amoxicillin/clavulanic acid. Preliminary results are encouraging but more study is clearly needed, especially in the paediatric population. In acute bacterial exacerbations of chronic bronchitis, short-course therapy with a variety of cephalosporins, second-generation fluoroquinolones and advanced generation macrolides/azalides/ketolides are all reasonable alternatives to traditional 7- to 14-day therapies. Cost containment in antimicrobial therapy should involve consideration of short-course therapy in the management of the most common types of respiratory tract infections.