Supraventricular arrhythmias, often seen in patients after cardiac surgery, may be associated with scars produced in the atria at the time of surgery. Double potentials, found in the presence of functional or anatomical block, can define the limits and critical regions of a reentrant circuit associated with the atriotomy scars. We describe six patients with seven distinct atrial tachycardias in whom atriotomy scars were successfully mapped during intraatrial reentry utilizing the presence and interelectrogram relationship of observed double potentials. The reentrant circuit was mapped in all patients by following the relationship between double potentials along the surgical scar, assuming that they would be widely split in the middle of the scar and merge into a single continuous fractionated potential at the apex of the scar. At this site, atrial pacing was performed to entrain the tachycardia and confirm the participation of the atriotomy scar in the clinically relevant atrial tachycardia. Radiofrequency ablation was performed from the site of electrogram fusion to the nearest anatomical obstacle. Five of seven atrial tachycardias were successfully ablated utilizing this technique over a mean follow-up of 10 months. We proposed that these double potentials and their interelectrogram relationship are an effective means of mapping atriotomy scars and guiding successful radiofrequency ablation.