Introduction: Left atrial posterior wall (LAPW) isolation is associated with favorable outcomes for catheter ablation of persistent atrial fibrillation (PEAF). Techniques for LAPW isolation include ablation at the periphery with or without high density ablation within the LAPW. The proportion of LA isolated by the lesion set also varies greatly. The optimal technique to achieve LAPW isolation is not clear. Objective: To assess impact of ablation lesion density within and dimensions of the LAPW isolation region on arrhythmia recurrence in catheter ablation of PEAF. Methods: LAPW lesion density and surface area relative to total LA surface area were calculated using electroanatomic maps of 110 consecutive patients undergoing LAPW isolation for PEAF (CARTO 3, Biosense Webster, Inc.). LAPW isolation was performed at the discretion of 5 experienced operators after voltage mapping. LAPW PV entrance and exit block were confirmed. Arrhythmia recurrence at two years was assessed by Kaplan-Meier analysis. Results: LAPW lesion density ranged from 0% - 99%. The proportion of LA surface area isolated ranged from 35% - 75%. There was no significant difference in arrhythmia-free survival stratified by median LAPW ablation density (31% vs. 27%, p=0.8) or median proportion of electrically-isolated LA surface area (31% vs. 27%, p=0.8%). Voltage map-guided LAPW isolation did not significantly decrease arrhythmia recurrence (29% vs. 28%, p=1). Conclusion: Neither the density of ablation within nor the dimensions of the LAPW isolated region predicted arrhythmia-free survival for catheter ablation of PEAF. Voltage map-guided LAPW isolation resulted in similar ablation efficacy regardless of LA scar burden.