A 55-year-old man was referred to our hospital because of a tumor in his right kidney. A Fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) scan revealed strong abnormal uptake by the tumor in the right kidney and a nodule in the right lung. The patient was diagnosed with stage IV renal cell cancer, for which he underwent transperitoneal nephrectomy. Pathological diagnosis revealed the tumor to be a renal cell carcinoma (clear cell carcinoma, G2, pT3a, v (+), INF-β). Sunitinib was administered because of the occurrence of multiple lung metastases; however, the therapeutic effect was insufficient, and progressive disease was observed on a CT scan. Therefore, everolimus was immediately administered as a second-line therapeutic agent. After treatment, the lung metastases reduced in size, as observed on a CT scan, and partial response continued for 1 year after therapy. One metastatic lesion persisted in the right lung; therefore, he underwent right upper lobe resection after discontinuing everolimus administration. No viable tumor cells were observed on pathological diagnosis, and the patient achieved pathological complete response. 3 month after discontinuing everolimus administration, no metastatic lesions have been observed.