The stoichiometry of metachromatic staining of chromatin by toluidine blue was investigated in isolated metaphase chromosomes from L929 cells using X-ray microanalysis. Microspectrophotometric measurements revealed that a hypsochromic shift (from 595 to 570 nm) occurs in toluidine blue stained chromosomes in relation to the staining solution. Under the electron microscope, stained chromosomes. After toluidine blue staining, X-ray microanalysis of chromosomes revealed a large increase for sulphur counts and a considerable increase for Fe and Cu counts, while the signal of Mg, Ca, Cl, K and Zn was reduced. After subtraction of the intrinsic sulphur signal, S/P ratios of 0.82--for euchromatic arms--and 0.85--for centromeric heterochromatin--were obtained. They are considered representative of dye/DNA phosphate ratios. These results indicate the occurrence of a nearly stoichiometric binding of toluidine blue to chromatin DNA and suggest that an external dye stacking is responsible for the metachromatic staining of metaphase chromosomes.