We evaluated an enzymatic procedure for the automated determination of serum and urinary creatinine. The procedure was sensitive and precise for serum creatinine concentrations as low as 3 mg/L, and the standard curve was linear to 200 mg/L. Measurements of creatinine in clinical serum and urine specimens agreed with those obtained by two other enzymatic methods and four picric acid methods. There was no interference from picrate-reactive substances tested. Among other substances, bilirubin (50-100 mg/L) interfered negatively with the assay, decreasing apparent creatinine concentrations by as much as 6 mg/L. The advantages of specificity, speed, and convenience make this enzymatic procedure an attractive primary or secondary method for creatinine determinations in clinical laboratories.