Introduction: Individuals with bipolar disorder (BD) have high rates of suboptimal medication adherence, medical illness, and premature mortality largely from cardiovascular causes. In the current analysis, we examined screening and baseline data from an ongoing randomized controlled trial and assessed clinical correlates of adherence to antihypertensives and BD medications in 55 patients with bipolar disorder and hypertension. Hypothesis: We assessed the hypothesis that adherence to antihypertensives would correlate with systolic blood pressure (SBP) and adherence to BD medication would correlate with psychiatric symptoms. Method: Inclusion criteria were a BD Type 1 or 2 diagnosis, being prescribed antihypertensives, and uncontrolled hypertension (SBP ≥130mmHg). Adherence was measured for the prior week with 1) self-reported Tablets Routine Questionnaire for antihypertensives (TRQ-HTN) and BD (TRQ-BD) with higher percentage reflecting worse adherence and 2) objective electronic monitoring using an eCAP © for one antihypertensive medication. Average SBP was calculated from 12 readings over one week. Symptoms of BD were measured with the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) and the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS). Results: Mean age of the sample (N=55) was 53.91±9.97, a majority female (61.8%), 49.1% Black and 45.5% White. Mean years of education was 14.09 ±2.83 and 95% had Bipolar Type I. At screen, TRQ-HTN was 35.80% ± 21.78 (N=55); at baseline, mean TRQ-HTN was 12.94 ± 16.88%. At screen, TRQ-BD was 29.61% ±28.02 (N=55); at baseline, TRQ-BD was 19.43% ±28.54 (N=50). At baseline, eCAP (N=43) was 39.53 ± 35.11%. There was a significant improvement in TRQ-HTN from screen to baseline (t(52) = -6.75 r <0.001) and a trend for TRQ-HTN (t(49) = 1.80, p = 0.078). There was a significant correlation between TRQ-HTN and eCAP at baseline (rs=0.307, p<.05, N= 43) yet eCAP reported more missed days than TRQ-HTN (Mean = -25.581 t(42) = -4.903 p<0.001). TRQ-BD was significantly correlated with BPRS ( r = 0.313, p <.05, N = 50) but not with MADRS. Neither TRQ-HTN nor eCAP were correlated with SBP. SBP significantly decreased from screen to baseline (t(53) = 2.357 p<.05). Conclusion: In conclusion, adherence levels vary widely and objective measurement identified rates of missed medications that were approximately 26% higher than self-report. Self-reported BD adherence was related to global psychiatric symptoms but not depression while antihypertensive adherence did not relate to SBP. Greater BD symptom severity may be a clinical indicator to assess for adherence problems and medication and BP monitoring alone may improve adherence and SBP.