With the availability of better treatment and prophylactic regimens for the infectious complications of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the non-infectious complications are gaining greater attention. HIV-related pulmonary arterial hypertension (HIV-PAH) is one of these. The incidence of HIV-PAH is estimated at 0.5% of HIV-infected individuals. The pathogenesis remains unclear. Patients present with symptoms as diverse as progressive shortness of breath, pedal edema, dry cough, fatigue, syncope, as well as chest pain. Chest X-ray always shows cardiomegaly and prominent pulmonary artery, and evidence of right ventricular hypertrophy can be seen from the electrocardiogram. The pulmonary arterial systolic pressure, diastolic pressure and pulmonary vascular resistance from right heart catheterization are increased. There are a few small studies showing the benefit of prostacyclin analog (epoprostenol and iloprost) and bosentan. The role of antiretrovirals remains controversial, as do those of other agents such as calcium channel blockers and anticoagulants. The prognosis of HIV-PAH is grave. Two thirds of HIV-PAH related mortality is usually secondary to consequences of pulmonary hypertension, with the worst survival noted in New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class III-IV. The probability of survival in one series was 73%, 60% and 47% at one, two and three years, respectively.