Objective: The diagnosis and treatment of female urethral stricture disease (FUSD) are practiced variably due to the scarcity of data on evaluation, variable defi nitions, and lack of long-term surgical outcomes. FUSD is diffi cult to rule out solely on the basis of a successful calibration with 14F catheter. In this study, we have tried to characterize the variable clinical presentation of FUSD, the diagnostic utility of calibration, videourodynamic study(VUDS), and urethroscopy in planning surgical management. Materials and Methods: A retrospective review of records of 16 patients who underwent surgical management of FUSD was analyzed. The clinical history, examination fi ndings, and the results of all the investigations (including urofl owmetry, VUDS fi ndings, urethroscopy) they underwent, the procedures they had undergone ,and the follow-up data were studied. Results: A total of 16 patients underwent surgical management of FUSD. 13 out of 16 patients had successful calibration with 14F catheter on the initial presentation. These 13 patients on VUDS demonstrated signifi cant BOO and had variable stigmata of stricture on urethroscopy. The mean IPSS, fl ow rate, and PVR at presentation and after urethroplasty were 23.88±4.95, 7.72±4.25mL/s, 117.06±74.46mL and 3.50±3.44, 22.34±4.80mL/s, and 12.50±8.50mL, respectively. (p <0.05). The mean fl ow rate after endo dilation(17F) (n=12) was 11.4±2.5mL/s while after urethroplasty improved to 20.30±4.19mL/s and was statistically signifi cant(p <0.05). Conclusions: An adept correlation between clinical assessment, urethroscopy fi ndings, and VUDS is key in objectively identifying FUSD and planning surgical management. A good caliber of the urethra is not suffi cient enough to rule out a signifi cant obstruction due to FUSD. Early urethroplasty provides signifi cantly better outcomes in patients who have failed dilation as a treatment.