The upgrading of heavy coker naphtha under conditions of the industrial fluid catalytic cracking (FCC) unit has been investigated, with the aim of obtaining light olefins and a gasoline fraction suitable to be used in the blending of motor fuels. The experiments have been conducted in a riser simulator reactor at: 500 and 550 degrees C; catalyst to oil mass ratio, 6 gcat goil(-1); and, contact time, 3 to 12 s. Moreover, the effect of the properties of two commercial equilibrium catalysts on the products has been also assessed. Products have been grouped in: dry gas, liquefied petroleum gases, gasoline, light cycle oil and coke. The presence of strong acid sites in the catalyst favors the formation of light olefins, yielding a 5 and 3.3 wt% of propylene and butenes, respectively, at 550 degrees C and 6 s. A higher content of zeolite (with moderate acid strength sites) and a bigger size of the mesopores of the matrix promote the formation of a commercially interesting gasoline fraction with a yield of 90 wt% under the same conditions, with a concentration of aromatics, naphthenes, n-paraffins, olefins and iso-paraffins of 25, 10, 28, 21 and 15 wt%, respectively, and a RON of 84.