Procoagulant activity (PCA) of leukocytes of renal transplant recipients was studied. This material, which activates coagulation, has previously been shown to be released from macrophages after they interact with mitogen-stimulated or antigen-stimulated T lymphocytes. Under endotoxin-free conditions, PCA of peripheral blood leukocytes, incubated for 90 min in tissue culture, was elevated in postoperative transplant recipients and in many transplant patients tested around the time of a rejection episode. The response to lipopolysaccharide added during culture was also increased in these populations. The PCA response was factor-VII-dependent when tested with washed peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), but was factor-VII-independent when tested with unwashed PBMC in their original culture medium. The results indicate a possible link between immunologic events and coagulation in transplant recipients.