Scanning electron micrographs are used to illustrate descriptions of the eggs of Aedes (Neomelaniconion) mcintoshi Huang and Ae. (Neo.) circumluteolus (Theobald). The eggs of both species are rhomboidal in dorsal or ventral view, particularly in Ae. circumluteolus, with the ventral surface in each case being substantially more curved than the dorsal. The chorionic cells are irregularly shaped in both species. Their structure is uniform over the whole egg surface in Ae. circumluteolus; in Ae. mcintoshi the anterior ventral cells have a distinct, large, central tubercle instead of the more uniformly sized tubercles present in cells over the remaining egg surface. The micropylar apparatus of both species is unusual in that the disk in most eggs may be covered with a dense mat of fine filamentous strands connected to small, sharp, irregular papillae.