We investigated the possible role of hepatitis G virus (HGV or GBV-C) in the aetiology of acute non-A-E hepatitis in Argentina by detecting viral RNA in sera by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) using primers specific for the putative NS3 helicase region of HGV. Sixty two patients with acute hepatitis were included in this study. The absence of hepatitis A-E was confirmed by serological testing, and all patients were negative for HCV RNA and autoimmune markers. All patients denied alcohol intake and the use of hepatotoxic drugs. Their mean age was 35.3 years and 37 were males. HGV RNA was present in 19/62 (30.6%) of the patients with non-A-E acute hepatitis. Among HGV-positive patients, three had parenteral risk factors within 3 months of onset, one was a health care worker, one was sexually promiscuous, one had travelled to the Middle East and 13 (68.4%) had no history of parenteral exposure. Epidemiological, clinical and biochemical features between HGV-positive and negative patients did not achieve statistical significance. Hence, HGV appears to play a role in the pathogenesis of acute viral hepatitis; however, the etiology of a significant number of hepatitis cases remains unclear, suggesting the existence of an additional agent(s). The absence of parenteral exposure in most of the HGV RNA-positive patients in this study shows that routes of community-acquired HGV infection are not yet completely understood.