Many advances in arthropod sterol metabolism, as it relates to ecdysteroid biosynthesis, have been made in the past 10 yr. The sterol 24-dealkylation system, present in the midgut of many species, is entirely absent in some members of at least four insect orders and the prothoracic glands of Manduca sexta. While Delta(5)-sterols are precursors in arthropod ecdysteroid biosynthesis, the Delta(7)-sterol, lathosterol, is the precursor in at least some plants. 7-Dehydrosterols are converted directly into ecdysteroids by insect prothoracic glands and ovaries, as well as crustacean Y-organs. Conclusive evidence for many potential mechanisms of sterol 7,8-dehydrogenation and conversion of the Delta(5,7)-sterols to 2,22,25-trideoxyecdysteroids is still lacking, though circumstantial evidence for a 5,6-epoxy-Delta(7)-sterol is discussed. The physiological relevance of 3-dehydroecdysteroids in some insects has only recently been appreciated. The sterol 7,8-dehydrogenating enzyme, the sequential terminal hydroxylases and ecdysone 20-monooxygenase all exhibit properties of cytochrome P-450 enzymes. The lack of tissue and substrate specificity reported for the terminal hydroxylations of exogenous substrates suggests that non-specific hydroxylases may be involved. Extensive pharmacological investigations of ecdysone 20-monooxygenase continue, and efforts toward the isolation and sequencing of this enzyme are underway. Developmental correlations suggest that the sterol 7,8-dehydrogenase and terminal hydroxylases in Manduca prothoracic glands are not regulated by prothoracicotropic hormone, in contrast to the utilization of 7-dehydrocholesterol. In crustaceans, the terminal hydroxylases are influenced by molt inhibiting hormone.