Emil Zuckerkandl (1 September 1849 in Győr, Hungary – 28 May 1910 in Vienna) was a Hungarian-Austrian anatomist. He was the brother of urologist Otto Zuckerkandl (1861-1921).
He was educated at the University of Vienna (M.D., 1874) and was an admiring student of Josef Hyrtl, and an anatomical assistant to Karl von Rokitansky (1804-1878) and Karl Langer (1819-1887). In 1875, he became privatdozent of anatomy at the University of Utrecht, and he was appointed assistant professor at the University of Vienna in 1879, being made professor at Graz in 1882. Beginning in 1888, he was a professor of descriptive and topographical anatomy at the University of Vienna.
He conducted research in almost all fields of morphology, making contributions to the normal and pathological anatomy of the nasal cavity, the anatomy of the facial skeleton, blood vessels, the brain, chromaffin system, et al.
He was married to the Galician-Austrian writer, journalist and critic Berta Szeps. The couple's house was a popular meeting place for the avant-garde in arts and science; their guests including sculptor Auguste Rodin (1840-1917), painter Gustav Klimt (1862-1918), architect Otto Wagner (1841-1918), writer Hermann Bahr (1863-1934), playwright Arthur Schnitzler (1862-1931) and composer Gustav Mahler (1860-1911).