Ghrelin, a 28 amino acid‐containing orexigenic peptide, is an endogenous ligand of the GH secretagogue receptor. It was extracted from the rat stomach, but is present in other organs. The aim of this work was to localize ghrelin by immunohistochemistry in autopsy‐derived non‐tumorous human pituitaries. Immunohistochemistry was performed using the streptavidin‐biotin‐peroxidase complex method and the results were analyzed independently by 3 of the authors. Double Immunostaining was also undertaken to determine which cell type was expressing both the adenohypophysial hormone and ghrelin. Results showed that ghrelin can be localized in the adenohypophysis. It's immunoexpression being cytoplasmic, weak to moderate, and present in only a subset of cells. The neurohypophysis is immunonegative. Double immunostaining showed that ghrelin is co‐localized with GH, ACTH and LH and is present to 51–90% of such cells. PRL, TSH and FSH cells are consistently non‐reactive. The role of ghrelin in adenohypophysial endocrine activity is not clear. It may well be that ghrelin exerts an autocrine‐paracrine effect and can modulate hormone synthesis and release.