Abstract Ten Crepis species from Bulgaria—five perennials (C. viscidula, C. paludosa, C. conyzaefolia, C. bithynica, C. schachtii), four annuals (C. pulchra, C. sancta, C. setosa, C. zacintha) and one biennial (C. biennis)—were analysed karyologically using haematoxylin staining, Feulgen cytophotometry (scanning densitometry and video-based image analysis), and DNA flow cytometry with propidium iodide. All taxa but the biennial are diploids with descending basic chromosome numbers, x=6, 5, 4, 3. Significant positive correlations were found between nuclear DNA content and karyotype length and nuclear DNA content and karyotypic asymmetry. Together with the results of previous authors our data suggest that evolutionary advancement could be correlated with more symmetrical karyotypes. Negative significant correlations were established between presumably advanced growth habit (from rhizomatous and tap-rooted perennials towards highly specialized annuals) and chromosome number and karyotype length. Nuclear DNA 1C-values on average were higher in perennials than in annuals, but the ranges were overlapping and the differences not significant. Crepis biennis (2 n=c. 40, presumably 10x) had the highest DNA quantity, but calculated at its x-level ranked relatively low in the species sample.