Abstract | Recent developments in our understanding of RR Lyrae variables are discussed, with special emphasis on their role as distance indicators. The dependence of RR Lyrae luminosity on metallicity and horizontal-branch (HB) morphology is now well understood with many pieces of supporting evidence. This allows the determination of distances to several Local Group galaxies (LMC, M31, and M33) by constructing HB population models that reproduce the observed luminosity functions of RR Lyraes in these galaxies. The new RR Lyrae distances to M31 and M33 are some 15-37 percent larger than those adopted by de Vaucouleurs (1986) and by Aaronson et al. (1986), while they are in reasonable agreements with the recent results based on multicolor CCD photometry of classical Cepheids. This indicates that the large value of Hubble constant (90-100 km/s/Mpc) suggested by these authors may be due, at least in part, to the errors in distances to nearby calibrating galaxies. |