Mass spectrometry is a valuable tool in structural and functional viral proteomics, where it has been used to identify viral capsid proteins, viral mutants, and posttranslational modifications. Further, mass-based approaches combined with time-resolved proteolysis (mass mapping) have revealed the dynamic nature of viral particles in solution; this method is contributing to an understanding of the dynamic domains of the viral capsid which may have significant value in developing new approaches for viral inactivation. As a result of these experiments, and by comparison with complementary data from X-ray crystallography, a new dimension to viral protein structure and function is emerging.