Mycobacterium gordonae is considered the least pathogenic of the Runyon Group II mycobacteria, although there are now welldocumented reports of infection varying from localized soft tissue infection to disseminated life threatening diseases. We report a 40-year-old Pakistani housewife, treated in childhood for tuberculosis, who presented with severe systemic illness, fever, ascites, hepatomegaly, persistent dysuria with sterile pyuria, pulmonary disease, and anorexia with weight loss. Liver biopsy histology showed multiple granulomata and multiple isolation of M. gordonae from sputum and urine, in keeping with disseminated mycobacterial infection. She had dramatic response to antituberculosis therapy with streptomycin, isoniazid, rifampicin, and pyrazinamide. No evidence existed for disturbed humoral or cellular immunity and HIV infection. This represents the fifth reported case of disseminated M. gordonae infection, the first from the Arabian Gulf. It was treated successfully with standard antituberculosis regimen.