Cyperus difformis has evolved resistance to pyrazosulfuron-ethyl and other acetohydroxyacid synthase (AHAS) inhibitors in paddy fields in China. To understand the distribution of resistance and the mutations involved, 38 populations collected were from 7 provinces and compared. Application of pyrazosulfuron-ethyl at 30 g a.i. ha(-1) identified 16 populations that survived, demonstrating resistance to this herbicide. Two exons of 498 and 1428 bp in length and a 1228-1233-bp intron of AHAS were cloned by genome walking, and three pairs of primers were designed to amplify eight conserved regions in this gene. In the 16 resistant (R) populations, five different types of mutations in the conserved region of the AHAS gene were identified: Pro-197-Ser, Pro-197-Arg, Pro-197-Leu, Asp-376-Glu, and Trp-574-Leu. Three R populations, YX15-22, YX12-10 and YX15-38, were chosen for in vitro AHAS activity assays, and the results showed that AHAS from YX15-22 carrying the Pro-197 mutation was insensitive to pyrazosulfuron-ethyl (resistance index (RI) = 310.0) and penoxsulam (RI = 10.0), whereas the enzyme from YX12--10 and YX15-38 was insensitive to pyrazosulfuron-ethyl, penoxsulam, imazapic and bispyribac-sodium (RI values ranging from 4.3 to 4462.0). AHAS inhibitor cross-resistance bioassays showed that YX12-10 and YX15-38 had cross-resistance to all of the tested herbicides (RI values ranging from 5.8 to 3321.9), while the YX15-22 population only had resistance to pyrazosulfuron-ethyl (RI = 827.4) and penoxsulam (RI = 6.6). This study clarified the distribution of resistant C. difformis in China and the different cross-resistance patterns given by various mutation types of AHAS.