The active RNA-dependent RNA polymerase of poliovirus, 3D(pol), is generated by cleavage of the 3CD(pro) precursor protein, a protease that has no polymerase activity despite containing the entire polymerase domain. By intentionally disrupting a known and persistent crystal packing interaction, we have crystallized the poliovirus polymerase in a new space group and solved the complete structure of the protein at 2.0 Angstrom resolution. It shows that the N-terminus of fully processed 3D(pol) is buried in a surface pocket where it makes hydrogen bonds that act to position Asp238 in the active site. Asp238 is an essential residue that selects for the 2' OH group of substrate rNTPs, as shown by a 2.35 Angstrom structure of a 3D(pol)-GTP complex. Mutational, biochemical, and structural data further demonstrate that 3D(pol) activity is exquisitely sensitive to mutations at the N-terminus. This sensitivity is the result of allosteric effects where the structure around the buried N-terminus directly affects the positioning of Asp238 in the active site.