Introduction: Systemic sclerosis is an autoimmune disease of unknown etiology characterized by fibrotic changes in the skin, blood vessels, and various internal organs. The disease has a wide spectrum of presentation and a variable clinical course that includes limited skin involvement to life-threatening disease. Clinical manifestations and disease severity differs among ethnic groups. The objective of this study is to describe the clinical and sociodemographic features of patients with well-characterized systemic sclerosis from Puerto Rico. Methods: A structured questionnaire was completed for each patient to gather information about demographic factors, clinical manifestations, laboratory findings, diagnostic studies, and pharmacologic treatments. Results: Of the 24 patients with systemic sclerosis, 96% were females, 83% had Raynaud's phenomenon, 67% had gastrointestinal involvement, 63% had skin hypopigmentation, 50% had digital pitting scars, 46% had arterial hypertension, 11% had pulmonary hypertension, and 4.8% had renal involvement. The overall median modified Rodnan skin score was 24.5 (inter-quartile range 16.0-31.3). Pulmonary function tests resulted in abnormal in 60% of 14 patients, of which 57% had restrictive lung disease (FVC<70%) and 42.9% had decreased diffusion capacity. Serologically, 66.7% were positive for antinuclear antibody and 62.5% were positive for anti-centromere. Conclusions: In this study, the predominant clinical features of Puerto Ricans with systemic sclerosis were gastrointestinal involvement, Raynaud's phenomenon, digital pitting scars, and lung disease. Patients had a moderate severity of skin disease. The presence of renal involvement and pulmonary hypertension were low in our group. No significant differences were found between systemic sclerosis disease subsets. (Ethn Dis. 2010;20[Suppl 1]:S1-185-S1-190)