The decline of neurological and neuromuscular function with age in older women and in subgroups of older women with selected risk factors for poor function is described using cross- sectional analyses of data on 8,080 women from the multicenter Study of Osteoporotic Fractures. All twelve performance-based tests of muscle strength, balance, gait, somatosensory discrimination and reaction time declined with increasing age. On a percentage scale, vibration threshold declined the most rapidly with age. Participants who were smokers, physically inactive, nonconsumers of alcohol, diabetics and more frequent fallers had poorer age-adjusted performance than those without these attributes. However, with a few exceptions, the rate of decline in performance with age for those with and without these characteristics did not differ significantly.