We have investigated the direct enantioselective amidation of mandelic acid with ammonia, catalyzed by a variety of commercial lipases including those from Candida rugosa, Mucor miehei, Pseudomonas sp., Rhizomucor miehei, and Thermomyces lanuginosus covalently immobilized onto Florisil® support via glutaraldehyde and polysuccinimide spacer arms. All the immobilized lipase preparations tested preferentially amidated the R isomer of mandelic acid. The highest amide yields were obtained for immobilized Pseudomonas sp. lipase preparations under the optimized reaction conditions. After 24 h of amidation, the reaction had proceeded with an excellent yield (50%) and enantiopurity (> 99%). The immobilized Pseudomonas sp. lipase preparations catalyzed the amidation reaction with the same yield and enantioselectivity. The enzyme immobilized via a glutaraldehyde spacer arm showed better reusability than that immobilized via a polysuccinimide spacer arm.In view of these results, it is revealed that the direct amidation of mandelic acid catalyzed by the immobilized Pseudomonas sp. lipases is a facile and effective methodology for obtaining (S)-mandelic acid and (R)-mandelamide.