Syphilis is caused by infection with Treponema pallidum subsp. pallidum (T. pallidum). The Enhanced CDC (ECDC) and Multi-locus Sequence Typing (MLST) are two different T. pallidum strain typing systems. Our lab previously showed that neurosyphilis is more common in patients infected with ECDC type 14d/f. In this project, we aimed to compare the two typing systems, and to determine if there is an association between neurosyphilis and MLST strain type. We performed MLST analysis on 75 T. pallidum isolates by analysis of regions of the tp0136, tp0548, and tp0705 genes. Samples were chosen because they were completely typeable by ECDC. We determined association between MLST type and neurosyphilis by using Chi-Square or Fisher’s exact test to compare each MLST type to all other types grouped together. We excluded MLST types with N<5 from the analysis. We determined a complete MLST type for 74 (99%) of 75 isolates and found that MLST subdivided two of the most common ECDC types, 14d/f and 14d/g, into 7 and 3 types. However, MLST failed to distinguish between some ECDC types, such as 14d/f and 15d/f. Compared to all other types, a reactive cerebrospinal fluid Venereal Disease Research Laboratory (CSF-VDRL) test, the diagnostic test for neurosyphilis, was more common in individuals infected with MLST type 1.1.2 (P=0.02), which corresponds to ECDC type 14d/f. A reactive CSF-VDRL was also more common in patients with tp0705 type 2 (P=0.01). A reactive CSF-VDRL was less common in patients infected with MLST type 1.3.1 (P=0.002), which corresponds to ECDC type 14d/g. In the future, we will examine whether one MLST typing target, tp0705, could be used alone on blood to identify individuals with syphilis who are at greatest risk for neurosyphilis.