Current understanding of the role of several cancer risk factors is more comprehensive, as reported for a number of sites, including the brain, colon, breasts, and ovaries. Despite such advances, the incidence of breast cancer continues to increase worldwide. Signals from the microenviroment have a profound influence on the maintenance or progression cancers. Although T cells present the most important immunological response in tumor growth in the early stages of cancer, they become suppressive CD4(+) and CD8(+) regulatory T cells (Tregs) after chronic stimulation and interactions with tumor cells, thus promoting rather than inhibiting cancer development and progression. Tregs have an important marker protein which is FoxP3, though it does not necessarily confer a Treg phenotype when expressed in CD4(+) T lymphocytes. High Treg levels have been reported in peripheral blood, lymph nodes, and tumor specimens from patients with different types of cancer. The precise mechanisms by which Tregs suppress immune cell functions remain unclear, and there are reports of both direct inhibition through cell-cell contact and indirect inhibition through the secretion of anti-inflammatory mediators such as interleukin. In this review, we present the molecular and immunological aspects of Treg cells in the metastasis of breast cancer.