Yearly follow-up data and multivariate analysis explored the effectiveness of temporal lobectomy for complex partial (CPS) and generalized motor seizures in 125 patients for 3 follow-up intervals: second year, last year, and average for all years. Eighty-four to eighty-eight percent of the 45 patients with only CPS were seizure-free (SF) at follow-up. Among 80 patients with both seizure types preoperatively, 75-84% had no CPS and 68-73% had no generalized motor seizures in the outcome intervals. Eighty-two percent of SF patients at 1 year remained so at 5 years, whereas 40% with rare seizures at 1 year were SF at 5 years. Forty-four percent of those with <90% improvement at 1 year became SF at 3 years and maintained that at 5 years, whereas only 9% of <90% improvement patients at 2 years became SF at 5 years. Only 6% of SF patients at 1 year had <90% improvement at 5 years. Multivariate analysis disclosed the following factors auguring favorable outcomes: febrile convulsions as etiology, lack of nonfebrile generalized motor seizures, highly lateralized EEG spikes, lack of extratemporal spikes, younger age at surgery, and no seizures within 1 week of operation.