Purpose: To determine the impact of prostate motion on dose coverage in proton therapy. Methods and Materials: A total of 120 prostate positions were analyzed on 10 treatment plans for 10 prostate patients treated using our low-risk proton therapy prostate protocol (University of Florida Proton Therapy Institute 001). Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging T2-weighted turbo spin-echo scans were registered for all cases. The planning target volume included the prostate with a 5-mm axial and 8-mm superoinferior expansion. The prostate was repositioned using 5- and 10-mm one-dimensional vectors and 10-mm multidimensional vectors (Points A–D). The beam was realigned for the 5- and 10-mm displacements. The prescription dose was 78 Gy equivalent (GE). Results: The mean percentage of rectum receiving 70 Gy (V70) was 7.9%, the bladder V70 was 14.0%, and the femoral head/neck V50 was 0.1%, and the mean pelvic dose was 4.6 GE. The percentage of prostate receiving 78 Gy (V78) with the 5-mm movements changed by −0.2% (range, 0.006–0.5%, p > 0.7). However, the prostate V78 after a 10-mm displacement changed significantly (p < 0.003) with different movements: 3.4% (superior), −5.6% (inferior), and −10.2% (posterior). The corresponding minimal doses were also reduced: 4.5 GE, −4.7 GE, and −11.7 GE (p ≤ 0.003). For displacement points A–D, the clinical target volume V78 coverage had a large and significant reduction of 17.4% (range, 13.5–17.4%, p < 0.001) in V78 coverage of the clinical target volume. The minimal prostate dose was reduced 33% (25.8 GE), on average, for Points A–D. The prostate minimal dose improved from 69.3 GE to 78.2 GE (p < 0.001) with realignment for 10-mm movements. Conclusion: The good dose coverage and low normal doses achieved for the initial plan was maintained with movements of ≤5 mm. Beam realignment improved coverage for 10-mm displacements. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]