The toxicity of Kaempferia galanga rhizome-derived methanol extract (RME), powder (RP) and steam distillate (RSD) to Meloidogyne incognita second-stage juveniles (J2) and eggs and their effects on Lycopersicon esculentum germination and growth were examined in vitro and in pot experiments. Results were compared with those of three nematicides. In contact+fumigant bioassays with J2, RME applied at 1, 0.5 and 0.25mg/g soil exhibited 92, 88, and 73% mortality, respectively. The lethality of RME was almost similar to that of carbofuran but lower than that of either fosthiazate or metam-sodium. RSD and RP were less active than RME. In vapor-phase mortality bioassayswith J2, the test materials were effective in closed container than in open one, indicating that mode of delivery was, in part, a result of vapor action. RME, RSD, and fosthiazate treatments resulted in 91, 100, and 95% inhibition of egg hatch at 250μg/ml and 82, 88, and 81% inhibition of egg hatch at 100μg/ml, respectively. In filter-paper bioassays with L. esculentum seed at 8.8μg/cm2, RME and RP did not cause germination inhibition, while RSD and fosthiazate treatments resulted in 84 and 13% germination inhibition. In pot tests, RME and RSD applied at 8mg/g soil reduced galling caused by M. incognita significantly and fosthiazate at 0.02mg/g soil reduced galling completely. Rhizome materials did not cause any adverse effect on growth of L. esculentum, while fosthiazate application caused significantly reduced root weight. K. galanga rhizome-derived materials, particularly methanol extract, merit further study as potential nematicides and hatching inhibitors for the control of M. incognita populations as fumigants with contact action.