It was previously reported that low doses, but not high doses, of UV trigger the Skp2-mediated proteasomal degradation of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21 in mammalian cells. Here we show that both UV-C and UV-B lead to decrease of p21 protein, but not mRNA, level in a dose-dependent fashion in all of six human cell lines and five mouse cell lines tested. Also, high doses of UV reduce the half-life of p21. High doses, but not low doses, of UV induced p21 degradation in both skp2-proficient and -deficient murine embryonic fibroblast cells. UV-induced p21 reduction was rescued by proteasome inhibitors in all human and mouse cell lines tested. Neither a caspase inhibitor nor small interfering RNA against skp2 had an effect on the UV-induced p21 decrease, suggesting that this p21 degradation pathway may not involve caspases, or Skp2. Finally, UV did not induce p21 ubiquitination but still induced its degradation when the E1-activating enzyme was inactivated in an E1 temperature-sensitive mouse embryonic fibroblast cell line. Altogether, these results demonstrate that UV induces p21 degradation through an Skp2 and ubiquitin-independent pathway.