B-lymphocytes were obtained either by thoracic duct cannulation of thymectomized, irradiated rats or by isolation of complement-receptor-bearing lymphocytes from normal rats. They were labeled in vitro with [ 3H]-leucine and injected iv into syngeneic recipients from which samples of spleen and lymph node were taken at intervals from 15 min to 48 hr after injection. The sites of initial localisation of B- and T-lymphocytes were identical suggesting that the cells migrated into both organs by a common entrance. The two cell types remained closely associated for several hours in the paracortex of lymph nodes and at the periphery of the periarteriolar lymphoid sheath of the spleen. After 1–6 hr, B-cells segregated from T-cells by moving on into the adjacent part of the lymphocyte corona in the follicular area. By 24 hr, B-cells were evenly distributed throughout the corona. A definite minority of B-cells but no T-cells were seen within the germinal centres. In the spleen, T-cells moved into the central area of the periarteriolar sheath before returning to the blood. The immunological significance of the routes of B- and T-cell migration is discussed.