This investigation determined the effect of serum protein binding on the kinetics of sulfisoxazole distribution, metabolism, and excretion. Adult rats, whose serum free fraction of sulfisoxazole (at a total concentration of 81 ± 6 μg/ml) was 0.05‐0.24, received a rapid intravenous injection of 20 mg/kg. Sulfisoxazole concentrations in plasma declined biexponentially with time. There were pronounced and reproducible interindividual differences in the total, metabolic, and renal sulfisoxazole clearances, each positively correlated with the serum free fraction of sulfisoxazole. The renal sulfisoxazole clearance had a component unaffected by serum protein binding. The apparent central compartment volume increased with an increasing serum free sulfisoxazole fraction, but the latter had no apparent effect on the first exponential term of the biexponential equation describing sulfisoxazole elimination kinetics in rats. Serum protein binding was a major determinant of intersubject differences in sulfisoxazole excretion and biotransformation kinetics. Copyright © 1979 Wiley‐Liss, Inc., A Wiley Company