Giant Cell Arteritis (GCA) is an autoimmune mediated systemic vasculitis affecting large arteries - the aorta and its branches. It has the highest incidence of all systemic vasculitides and manifests nearly exclusively in patients aged 50 or older. Amongst its non-specific and specific symptoms are headaches, mastication claudication or signs of rheumatic polymyalgia, a relatively common and immediate treatment requiring condition being acute vision loss due to optic ischemia. A GCA diagnosis is based on clinical and paraclinical findings and imaging techniques including PET/CT; with an important role still being played by histological verification from temporal artery biopsy. Treatment is based on immunosuppressive agents - systemic glucocorticoids, with adjunct therapy options being methotrexate and tocilizumab. Currently, there are also several clinical trials examining the efficacy of other modern biological agents in GCA.