The purpose of this report is to synthesize the results from studies examining the effect of exercise on postprandial lipemia to summarize the existing data and provide direction for future research. A quantitative review of the literature was performed using meta-analytic methods to quantify the effect sizes. Moderator analyses were performed to examine features of the studies that could potentially influence the effect of exercise on postprandial lipemia. Thirty-eight effects from 555 people were retrieved from 29 studies. The mean weighted effect was moderate as indicated by Cohen's d (d = -0.57; 95% confidence interval [CI], -0.71 to -0.43), indicating that people who perform exercise before meal ingestion exhibit a 0.5 standard deviation reduction in the postprandial triglyceride (TG) response relative to persons in comparison groups. There was no significant effect of study design, gender, age, type of meal ingested, exercise intensity, exercise duration, or timing of exercise on the postprandial response (P > .05). There was, however, significant variation in the effect sizes, for women for exercise performed within 24 hours of meal ingestion, and for exercise performed more than 24 hours before meal ingestion (P < .01). For studies that reported the energy expenditure of exercise, there was a significant relationship between effect size and energy expenditure (r = -.62, P = .02). Results from this quantitative review of the literature suggest that exercise has a moderate effect on the postprandial lipemic response and that the energy expenditure of prior exercise may play a role in the magnitude of this effect. Other factors that may affect the response remain to be clarified. Copyright 2003 Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved.