Computed tomography (CT) is the standard method of brain imaging in acute stroke. To an experienced examiner, nonenhanced CT will exclude hemorrhage and may indicate early ischemic signs. Reliable description of an ischemic area and the underlying vascular disease is not possible in the acute phase but is possible, particularly within the first hours, when therapeutic decisions on matters such as systemic thrombolysis are to be made. For such rapid decision-making, imaging must provide more information. Novel, contrast-enhanced CT techniques can provide this information. Perfusion CT (CTP) can show brain perfusion, allowing one to distinguish between reversible and irreversible damage in an ischemic area. Also, CT angiography (CTA) can detect occlusion or stenosis in the relevant vasculature. Using a modern, multislice CT scanner, it is now possible to combine these modalities of imaging. In a fast protocol for emergency evaluation, all three methods can be performed and evaluated to provide the crucial information within 15 min. In the first 102 patients examined within 6 h of symptom onset using this protocol, multimodal CT contributed substantially to therapeutic decisions, even though there are some limitations in these methods.