SETTING: Puerto Rico. OBJECTIVE: To describe the characteristics and survival experience of AIDS patients with tuberculosis (TB) from 1981 through 1998. DESIGN: A population based study using the AIDS Surveillance System, including survival analysis. RESULTS: During the period studied, 1000 AIDS cases were reported with TB, representing 4.3 % of total cases. Of these, males accounted for 82.1%, and 84% were diagnosed with pulmonary TB. Approximately 71% of the cases were reported as having died. AIDS cases who were intravenous drug users (IDU) accounted for 63.7% of the cases. The median survival of AIDS/TB cases was 21.4 months, and did not differ by sex or TB site (P > 0.05). IDUs with TB had a longer survival than IDUs with other AIDS-defining conditions; however, AIDS/TB cases with a CD4 count <200/mm(3) had a poorer survival (23.4 months) than those with a count of greater than or equal to 200/mm(3) (47.9 months). CONCLUSIONS: The overall prevalence of TB in AIDS patients in Puerto Rico is low compared with other countries. As in other studies, the variable that explained poorer survival among AIDS/TB cases was the CD4+ lymphocyte count. Further prospective studies regarding survival in the Hispanic population are needed to confirm these findings.