The Freundlich isotherm model was used to describe desorption behavior of atrazine from two surface soils. Soils were contacted with five different initial aqueous atrazine concentrations-0.25, 1.0, 2.5, 10, and 25 muM-for a period of 7 days at a solid/liquid ratio of 0.175 (w/w). Desorption data was obtained by allowing the adsorbed atrazine to desorb for 14 days at solid/liquid ratios of 0.175, 0.110, 0.075, 0.047, and 0.027. Data were fitted to the Freundlich model and interpreted in terms of the linearity and capacity parameters for adsorption (n and K-F) and desorption (n(d) and K-F(d)). Atrazine adsorption to both soils was described as near-linear. Desorption isotherms, however, were more nonlinear than the adsorption isotherms. Desorption linearity (n(d)) and capacity (K-F(d)) were related to the initial aqueous concentration (C-0) of atrazine during adsorption. Both linearity and capacity were lower at smaller values of C-0 and increased logarithmically with C-0.