Objectives. To assess the peripheral and central haemodynamics, in particular the effect on minimal resistance in the hand, with an ACE inhibitor in comparison with a diuretic. Design. Double-blind randomized parallel group study. Subjects. Twenty-eight previously untreated men with essential hypertension (supine diastolic blood pressure > 95 mmHg repeatedly on placebo). Methods/intervention. Casual and intra-arterial blood pressure, dye-dilution technique, water plethysmography at rest and at ischaemia, enalapril (n = 14), hydrochlorothiazide (n = 14). Results. After 6 months the mean arterial pressure was reduced from 112.7 to 96.9 mmHg (change - 15.9 mmHg; 95 % confidence interval (CI) - 21.9, - 9.8) on enalapril and from 110.1 to 101.5 mmHg (change - 8.6 mmHg; CI - 14.4, - 2.8). Heart rate did not change on any of the therapies. Enalapril reduced blood pressure mainly through a reduction in total peripheral resistance (DELTA - 3.0 PRU100; CI - 5.6, - 0.4) while hydrochlorothiazide reduced blood pressure mainly through a reduction in cardiac output (DELTA - 0.8 l/min-1; CI - 1.5, - 0.0 7). Minimal vascular resistance (mean of right and left hand) displayed a significant time x treatment interaction indicating a different trend with enalapril than hydrochlorothiazide with a change of - 0.12 PRU100 (CI - 0.33, 0.0 5) on enalapril and a change of 0.14 (CI - 0.29, 0.56) on hydrochlorothiazide. The resistance level after 6 months was significantly higher on hydrochlorothiazide than on enalapril (P = 0.0105). Conclusion. Enalapril reduced blood pressure through vasodilatation and hydrochlorothiazide through decreased cardiac output. The two therapies also affected minimal vascular resistance (an indirect measure of vascular wall thickness) differently; with enalapril showing a favourable response in contrast to hydrochlorothiazide.