Male albino rats received injections of saline for 5 days before and 5 days after a series of 10 daily injections of dl-amphetamine, 1 or 5 mg/kg, sc. Core temperatures were measured every 30 min for 4 h after each injection and feeding activity (on a CRF operant schedule) every 30 min throughout. After amphetamine at either 0800 or 2000 h, a dose-related hyperthermia, stereotypic behavior, and an initial inhibition of feeding occurred. This anorexia decreased over the 4-h post injection period only in the evening-injected rats receiving 5 mg/kg. Mean body weights of all groups continued to increase during amphetamine administration. Mean 24-h food intake tended to remain below that in the control period and the hyperthermic response did not change significantly in any group. Initially on withdrawal from amphetamine all groups showed 'rebound' feeding. Taken with earlier reports, these results suggest that tolerance development to amphetamine-induced anorexia, hyperthermia, and stereotypic behavior occurs at different rates and is dependent upon frequency, route, dose, time, the amphetamine used, and whether the diet was restricted.