—This paper derives the optimal search time and the optimal search cost that can be achieved in unstructured peer-topeer networks when the demand pattern exhibits clustering (i.e. file popularities vary from region to region in the network). Previous work in this area had assumed a uniform distribution of file replicas throughout the network with an implicit or explicit assumption of uniform file popularity distribution whereas in reality, there is clear evidence of clustering in file popularity patterns. The potential performance benefit that the clustering in demand patterns affords is captured by our results. Interestingly, the performance gains are shown to be independent of whether the search network topology reflects the clustering in file popularity. We also provide the relation between the queryprocessing load and the number of replicas of each file for the clustered demands case showing that flooding searches may have lower query-processing load than random walk searches in ...