The genus Flavivirus consists of more than 70 virus species and subtypes, the majority of which are transmitted by mosquitoes or ticks, although some have no known vector (NKV). The ability of these viruses to infect cultured cells derived from mosquito or tick species offers a useful insight into the suitability of such vectors to harbour and replicate particular viruses. We undertook a comparative study of the susceptibility of mammalian Vero cells, a clonal mosquito cell line (C6/36) and recently developed cell lines derived from the ticks (Acari: Ixodidae) Ixodes ricinus (L.) (IRE/CTVM18), I. scapularis (Say) (ISE6), Rhipicephalus appendiculatus (Neumann) (RAE/CTVM1) and Amblyomma variegatum (Fabricius) (AVL/CTVM17) to infection with 13 flaviviruses (and one alphavirus) using immunofluorescence microscopy and plaque assay techniques. The C6/36 mosquito cell line was infected by all the mosquito-borne flaviviruses tested but not by NKV viruses or tick-borne viruses, with the exception of Langat virus (LGTV). The tick cell lines were susceptible to infection by all of the tick-borne viruses tested, as well as two mosquito-borne viruses, West Nile virus (WNV) and the alphavirus, Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (VEEV), but not other mosquito-borne viruses or NKV viruses.