The therapeutic regimen for metastatic renal cell cancer has changed substantially in the last years. Formerly, metastatic disease was regarded as being inoperable and had a disastrous prognosis. Nowadays, radical nephrectomy is the accepted urologic-oncologic standard therapy in metastatic primaries, if technically feasible. A complete resection of metastases may be curative, or can achieve a substantial palliative benefit. A better understanding of prognostic parameters helps in the selection of patients with a chance of benefiting from systemic immunochemotherapy. For patients with rapidly progressing tumors or sarcomatoid dedifferentiation, new effective chemotherapy regimens are available. New angiogenesis inhibitors such as sutent, avastin or sorafenib can potentially be effectively used in future therapeutic regimens.