The effect of exercise on the riboflavin status of male rats was studied after 6 or 8 wk of treadmill running. Sedentary and exercised rats were pair fed diets marginal in riboflavin (2.0 or 2.5 mg/kg), and their tissue riboflavin concentrations and erythrocyte glutathione reductase activity coefficients (EGRAC) were compared. The rats exercised for 8 wk had similar body weights but significantly greater weights for heart, gastrocnemius and soleus muscles, less epididymal fat and more total muscle nitrogen and riboflavin than their sedentary controls. Similar changes were evident after 6 wk of exercise, but some were not statistically significant. The EGRAC values of both exercised and sedentary rats responded to changes in dietary riboflavin but were not different from each other. The specific activity of mitochondrial acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (per milligram protein) of the soleus muscle was unaffected by exercise; however, when expressed per gram of tissue or per muscle, the activities in exercised rats were 25% (P less than 0.05) and 60% (P less than 0.01) higher, respectively, than in sedentary rats. On the basis of the riboflavin-dependent parameters measured in this study, exercise did not increase the dietary riboflavin requirement of growing rats but did increase total riboflavin retention in gastrocnemius and soleus muscles.