Subcellular fractionation revealed that a significant fraction of total sphingosine kinase, the enzyme that phosphorylates sphingosine to form the bioactive lipid metabolite sphingosine-1-phosphate, resides in the nuclei of Swiss 3T3 cells, localized to both the nuclear envelope and the nucleoplasm. Platelet-derived growth factor, in addition to rapidly stimulating cytosolic sphingosine kinase, also induced a large increase in nucleoplasm-associated activity after 12–24 h that correlated with progression of cells to the S-phase of the cell cycle and translocation of sphingosine kinase–green fluorescent protein fusion protein to the nuclear envelope. Our results add sphingosine kinase to the growing list of lipid-metabolizing enzymes associated with the nucleus, and suggest that sphingosine-1-phosphate may also play a role in signal transduction in the nucleus.