Twenty patients with Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD), confirmed by dystrophin tests, were studied histologically. There were several morphological differences between younger (less than or equal to 15-year-old) and older (greater than 15-year-old) patients. In the younger patients, active muscle fiber necrosis followed by a regenerating process was conspicuous. In the older patients, the active degenerative changes appeared less prominent and, instead, more chronic myopathic changes such as moth-eaten fibers, fiber splitting, and hypertrophic fibers were evident. These age-dependent differences in the pathology of BMD were irrespective of the duration of clinical symptoms, i.e., BMD patients of a similar age showed a similar morphological feature regardless of age at onset. Although the presence of mild fiber type grouping and some small angulated atrophic fibers suggested a certain degree of neurogenic involvement, none of biopsies showed significant grouped atrophy as seen in neuropathic disorders. There was no correlation between the histological changes and the specific dystrophin abnormality.