The interactions between temozolomide and chloroquine were examined via Dispersion‐Corrected Density Functional Theory and MP2 methods. Chloroquine was considered in both its lowest energy structure and in a local minimum where its aromatic system and secondary amine group are free to interact directly with temozolomide. The accessibility of these two components to intermolecular interaction makes the lowest energy dimer of this local monomer minimum competitive in total energy with that involving chloroquine's most stable monomer geometry. In either case, the most stable heterodimer places the aromatic ring systems of the two molecules parallel and directly above one another in a stacked geometry. Most of the local minima are also characterized by a stacked geometry as well. Comparison between B3LYP and B3LYP‐D binding energies confirms dispersion is a primary factor in stabilizing these structures. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.