High-resolution magnetocardiographic mapping was applied to localize the ventricular preexcitation site in ten patients suffering form Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome. Three different source models were tested, consisting of the dipole and quadrupole moments in a general multipole expansion. Noninvasive localizations were performed by computations based on measured magnetic maps without a priori assumptions of the source location and without imposing any constraints. In all cases, the computed results were compared with invasive localization results obtained by catheter mapping technique. Preoperative catheterization localizes the atrial end of the accessory pathway, while our method localizes the ventricular preexcitation site. Of the models used, the average three-dimensional difference between the invasive localization results and the HR-MCG results was smallest 2.9 cm for the source model consisting of the magnetic dipole. The preexcitation site was very deep in all cases. The current dipole alone was inaccurate in estimating the source depth, but inclusion of the quadrupole moments improved the results. Two of the patients underwent surgery to interrupt the accessory pathway, which provided further validation for the noninvasive localizations.