F-specific RNA (FRNA) bacteriophages can be assayed in wastewater by simple and rapid methods. Their inactivation by UV radiation follows first-order kinetics and relatively simple formulas can describe the effect of UV absorbance by wastewater and the wavelength-dependent killing efficiency of polychromatic lamps. Because the organisms can be grown in high concentrations, biological calibration of full-scale reactors requires only relatively small volumes of phage culture. Naturally occurring FRNA-phages were more resistant to UV than somatic coliphages, Escherichia coli and faecal streptococci. The inactivation rate constant was almost equal to that of reoviruses, which underlines the suitability of FRNA-phages as a process indicator for UV inactivation of viruses. A pure culture of MS2 was inactivated at a rate which was elmost twice that of naturally occurring FRNA-phages, indicating the necessity of designing reactors for practical applications on field-data rather than laboratory experiments.