[περίληψη] In this paper we present validation results of the total ozone column data products of the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) on board the NASA EOS-AURA satellite through comparisons with ground-based observations by Dobson and Brewer spectrophotometer instruments. Quality-controlled and archived total ozone column data from these ground-based instruments located at stations worldwide have been used to validate more than 2 a of total ozone column observations from OMI. There are two operationally available satellite total ozone column data products, based on the OMI-TOMS and the OMI-DOAS retrieval algorithms, respectively. Validation with ground-based data focused on global comparisons and seasonal dependence and the possible dependence on latitude and solar zenith angle. Our results show a globally averaged agreement of better than 1% for OMI-TOMS data and better than 2% for OMI-DOAS data with the ground-based observations. The OMI-TOMS data product is shown to be of high overall quality with no significant dependence on solar zenith angle or latitude. The OMI-DOAS data product shows no significant dependence on latitude except for the high latitudes of the Southern Hemisphere where it systematically overestimates the total ozone value. In addition a significant dependence on solar zenith angle is found between OMI-DOAS and ground-based data. Comparisons of satellite and ground-based data tend to show a marginal seasonal dependence even though it remains unclear whether this dependence originates from the ground-based or spaceborne observations.