Although chronic ethanol administration in C57BL/6J mice did not cause an induction of ethanol metabolism, it altered the metabolism of chlordiazepoxide (CDP). Significantly lower blood levels of CDP, but higher levels of N-desmethyl CDP (NDCDP), were observed in ethanol-dependent mice compared to pair-fed controls during the first hour after CDP injection. Mice treated chronically with CDP showed significantly lower blood levels of CDP and NDCDP than pair-fed controls after a test dose of CDP. In response to an injection of ethanol, the CDP-dependent mice had lower blood alcohol levels (BAL) than the pair-fed controls, but the rate of fall of BAL was not different in the two groups. Thus, chronic CDP treatment affected the absorption and distribution of ethanol. These results provide a metabolic basis for the manifestations of CDP tolerance and ethanol cross-tolerance that have been reported in CDP-dependent mice. © 1990.