Compatibility of the polycarbonates of bisphenol A (PC) and tetramethyl bisphenol A (TMPC) was studied in glassy films cast from CH2Cl2 at room temperature, and above the glass-transition temperature. Blends with different compositions and of different molecular weights were analyzed by DSC and small-angle neutron scattering (SANS). Solution studies were made with light scattering and microscopy. Some of the blend films were two-phased when cast at room temperature, but all films were one-phased in equilibrium above the glass transition. The SANS data demonstrated that phase separation in the cast films was not caused by inherent incompatibility of PC and TMPC, but was induced by the solvent CH2Cl2. The effect is caused by a closed miscibility gap in the ternary solution system PC/TMPC/CH2Cl2.