The death rate from breast cancer is falling rapidly in most developed countries due, at least in part, to the use of adjuvant endocrine therapy in women with endocrine responsive disease. In post-menopausal women tamoxifen has been the gold standard for nearly 20 years. More recently the aromatase inhibitors (AI) have become established in the management of advanced breast cancer and are being evaluated in the adjuvant setting in trials that include tens of thousands of women. Recently, data have emerged that provide increasingly strong evidence supporting the use of AI in the adjuvant setting. Anastrozole as initial adjuvant endocrine treatment has shown superiority over tamoxifen in terms of disease free survival, and impressive reductions in the risk of recurrence have been demonstrated in trials evaluating the switch from tamoxifen to an AI, either letrozole after 5 or exemestane after 2-3 years of tamoxifen respectively. The data from these recent publications, and the potential impact on routine care of women with post-menopausal breast cancer is discussed.