An 18-year-old left-handed African American male presented with a year-long history of seizures characterized by episodic palpitations, sweating, and agitation. Brain magnetic resonance imaging revealed an enhancing tumor in the right anterior entorhinal cortex with adjacent amygdalar enlargement. Interictal magnetoencephalography and video-electroencephalogram -confirmed lesional right temporal lobe epilepsy. The patient underwent a partial right anterior temporal lobectomy, with histopathology revealing WHO Grade 2 pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma with a BRAF V600 E mutation. The amygdala showed no tumor infiltration, confirming reactive hyperplasia rather than neoplastic involvement. This case underscores the importance of distinguishing tumor infiltration from benign seizure-related amygdalar enlargement in long-term epilepsy-associated tumors, usefully informing surgical strategy.