Experiments were conducted in which Salmonella enteritidis Phage Type 8, Phage Type 2, and RDNC (reaction does not conform) or three isolates of Salmonella typhimurium of diverse origin were fed to adult laying hens to determine if S. enteritidis has a selective advantage over S. typhimurium, which is now rarely isolated from chicken eggs, in its capacity to invade reproductive tissues. The results revealed that S. enteritidis and S. typhimurium may be equal in their potential to colonize the tissues of the reproductive tract and eggs that are forming in the oviduct prior to oviposition. S. enteritidis, but not S. typhimurium, was isolated from egg contents after oviposition. The degree to which intestinal, hepatic, splenic, or reproductive tissues were colonized by either serotype was not seen to affect the rate of colonization of eggs forming in the oviduct or the contamination of eggs after oviposition. Virulence factors related to the difference in the association of S. enteritidis and S. typhimurium with egg-borne salmonellosis remain to be defined.