The incidence of brain abscess remains high, despite the development of novel antibiotics. Vancomycin or carbapenems, which are third-generation cephems, are recommended as standard therapy for bacterial meningitis or brain abscess. The effectiveness of the high-dose meropenem therapy on brain abscess has occasionally been reported. We experienced 2 consecutive cases of brain abscess in adults. The first patient was a 67-year-old man with diplopia, dizziness, and dysesthesia on the left upper and lower extremities. Images of T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with contrast medium and diffusion-weighted MRI showed a ring enhancing cystic lesion and a high intensity lesion, respectively, in the right pons. The second patient was a 37-year-old man who complained of right hemiparesis. MRI revealed a ring-enhancing cystic mass in the left thalamus. On the basis of MRI findings, patients were diagnosed with brain abscess and were given high-dose meropenem (6g/day) continuously for 2 months. The abscess resolved completely after treatment with meropenem administered intravenously. Further, neurological deficits caused by abscess successfully improved. High-dose meropenem therapy should be considered as an effective treatment for brain abscess, even in the brain stem and basal ganglia, where it is quite difficult to achieve surgical access.