PURPOSE: We compared subjective quality of life, well-being, urinary tract symptoms and distress in patients after radical cystectomy and orthotopic urinary reconstruction with those in a matched control population. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Included in this study were 101 consecutive recurrence-free patients who underwent radical cystectomy and orthotopic bladder substitution with an ileal urethral Kock neobladder at Herlev Hospital with a minimum followup of 1 year. A frequency matched control group comprising 147 individuals was selected from the same geographical region. Information was collected by an anonymous postal questionnaire and analyzed externally in Sweden. RESULTS: The prevalence of low or moderate psychological well-being (32% versus 36%) and subjective quality of life (30% versus 38%), and high or moderate anxiety (23% versus 18%) and depression (26% versus 37%) was similar in patients with an orthotopic neobladder and population controls. Patients with a neobladder felt as attractive as the control population. Of the operated men 94% had erectile dysfunction compared with 48% of controls. Daytime and nighttime urinary frequency was similar in patients and controls (3% and 3%, and 15% and 13%, respectively), while the prevalence of urinary leakage at least once monthly was higher in patients (18% versus 5%). Intermittent self-catheterization was performed by 26% of patients with a neobladder. Urinary tract infection (14% versus 6%) was more common and the prevalence of distressful bowel symptoms (14% versus 9%) was slightly more common in patients than in controls. CONCLUSIONS: Well-being and subjective quality of life in patients after radical cystectomy and orthotopic bladder substitution were similar to those in a matched control population.