The yield stress is a sensitive index of blood fluidity at low shear. Seven healthy adults were studied at hematocrits varying between 40 and 80% and fibrinogen concentrations from 0.0 to 0.935 g/dl. Multivariable analysis was used to determine the functional dependence of yield stress on hematocrit and fibrinogen level. The major findings from this analysis include a decreasing effect of fibrinogen at high concentrations (saturation effect), a relative insensitivity of yield stress to fibrinogen at low concentration (threshold effect), and a strong interaction between the effects of hematocrit and fibrinogen concentration on yield stress. Our results give the normal range of yield stress for a given value of fibrinogen and hematocrit and can be used to predict the effect of reductions in hematocrit or fibrinogen on the yield stress of normal blood.