Among Down syndrome cases born in 1964--1976 reported to the British Columbia Registry for Handicapped Children, the mean parental age was about half a year greater than in the entire population of live births after controlling for maternal age, a difference significant at the .05 level. After adjustment for maternal age, a regression analysis was consistent with an increase of 1.024-fold for each year of paternal age. Among Down syndrome cases in 1952--1963, however, for which ascertainment appears likely to be less complete, there was no evidence for a significant paternal age effect. The reasons for the variation between the two groups investigated here and the heterogeneity in results among studies of other populations are discussed.