Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is an aggressive skin cancer with a high (20%) rate of distant metastases, 80 percent of which occur within 2 years of diagnosis. Metastatic MCC (mMCC) to the heart is rare and presents a management challenge. Our systematic literature review revealed only 11 cardiac mMCC case reports. Most (n=6) patients received chemotherapy which is now known to lack durable response in MCC, and 2 received no treatment due to advanced disease and comorbidities. Hence, to better understand cardiac mMCC we queried an MCC data repository of patients diagnosed between 2011-2021. Progression-free survival (PFS) was measured from date of cardiac mMCC to progression or death. Among 582 MCC patients with distant metastases, 9 developed cardiac mMCC. Median age at initial MCC diagnosis (stage I (1), stage III (6), stage IV (2)) was 69 years. Most (n=8) patients developed mMCC to the right atrium, except for 1 patient (initial stage pIIIA) who had metastasis to the left atrium. Treatment for cardiac mMCC varied: 5 patients received immunotherapy combined with radiotherapy, while the reminder received immunotherapy alone, somatostatin analog, or chemotherapy. Five patients had a complete response in the cardiac lesion after immunotherapy, with or without radiotherapy. Median PFS and overall survival (OS) was 114 and 325 days, respectively. To explore whether presence of cardiac mMCC impacts OS, we matched cardiac mMCC patients to non-cardiac mMCC patients by age, sex, stage, immunosuppression status, and number of prior metastatic episodes. Using Kaplan-Meier statistical analysis, we found no difference in OS for the matched cohort (p=0.96). Taken together, these data indicate the emerging role of immunotherapy and radiotherapy in controlling cardiac mMCC. Furthermore, the location of mMCC to the heart does not appear to confer a worse prognosis compared to non-cardiac sites.