Three ceramic magnetic compositions within the CuZnTi ferrite system, having the Curie temperatures centered around 60, 80 and 100 degrees C, respectively, were investigated in order to determine the time-temperature stability of their main magnetic properties. Permeability and the slope of permeability around their Curie points were determined on ring shaped samples, before and after being subjected to long term (over 6000 h) ageing at their Curie temperature and for a shorter time of about 50h at higher temperatures up to 700 degrees C. Rates of changes of 33, 66 and 100 ppm h-l of the maximum slopes of permeability were found for the samples aged at 60, 80 and 100 degrees C, respectively. The samples aged at temperatures higher than 200 degrees C show a rather sudden decrease of maximum slope of permeability, but no shift of the Curie temperature and the working point, corresponding to the temperature where the slope has the maximum value. This is the most interesting result as concerns the use of such magnetic temperature sensors for the construction of highly sensitive temperature controllers, for example ultrathermostats. The results are discussed in terms of the migration processes of the cations, especially Cu2+,from metastable positions on which they were frozen during the rapid cooling of the sample from the sintering temperature, to the more stable ones, namely the octahedral sites into the spinel lattice. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science Limited. All rights reserved.