This study evaluated the differences of corneal thickness and corneal endothelial morphology in diabetes compared with age-matched, healthy control subjects; in addition, we tested for correlation according to the duration of diabetes. Ultrasound pachymetry and noncontact specular microscopy were performed on 200 patients with diabetes and 100 control subjects. We compared the values for diabetics and normal persons with ANACOVA to adjust for age. Moreover, we examined the correlation between the subject parameters and the duration of diabetes by using a partial correlation coefficient that controlled for age. The diabetic subjects had thicker corneas, less cell density and hexagonality, and more irregular cell size of the corneal endothelium than did the controls (P 0.05). Central corneal thickness was correlated with duration of diabetes (P < 0.05), but corneal endothelial morphology was not (P < 0.05). Those patients with diabetic duration of over 10 years have more corneal morphological abnormalities, especially the coefficient of variation in cell size, compared with the normal subjects. The central corneal thickness was significantly correlated with diabetic duration after controlling for age.