Objectives: To evaluate the efficacy and the survival rate depending on different treatment modalities in FIGO Stage IIA cervical cancer. Materials and Methods: The authors identified 59 FIGO Stage IIa patients from 844 cervical cancer patients who were treated between January, 1992 and February, 2014. Medical records were retrospectively reviewed and patients were classified according to four different treatment modalities and compared regarding complications, recurrence, and overall survival rates. Results: Fifty-nine (6.99%) of the 844 cervix cancer patients were at FIGO Stage IIA. Fourteen patients received primary radiotherapy (RT), 27 patients primary chemoradiotherapy (CRT), ten patients had radical hysterectomy followed by adjuvant RT, and eight patients had radical hysterectomy followed by adjuvant CRT. Five-year overall survival rates among the primary RT, primary CRT, adjuvant RT after radical hysterectomy (RH), and adjuvant CRT after RH groups were found to be 55.6%, 72.7%, 62.5%, and 71.4% (p = 0.802), respectively and five-year disease free survival rates of these groups were found to be 71.4%, 88.9% , 80% , and 87.5% (p = 0.537), respectively. Conclusion: No statistically significant difference was identified regarding the efficacy and the rate of survival among four different treatment modalities in Stage IIa cervical cancer patients.