How deliberation on sensory cues and action selection interact in decision-related brain areas is still not well understood. Here, monkeys reached to one of two targets, whose colors alternated randomly between trials, by discriminating the dominant color of a checkerboard cue composed of different numbers of squares of the two target colors in different trials. In a \"Targets First\" task the colored targets appeared first, followed by the checkerboard; in a \"Checkerboard First\" task, this order was reversed. After both cues appeared in both tasks, responses of dorsal premotor cortex (PMd) neurons covaried with action choices, strength of evidence for action choices, and RTs--- hallmarks of decision-related activity. However, very few neurons were modulated by checkerboard color composition or the color of the chosen target, even in the Checkerboard First task. These findings implicate PMd in the action-selection but not the perceptual components of the decision-making process in these tasks.