The acute behavioral effects of buspirone (15 and 30 mg/70 kg), alprazolam (0.75 and 1.5 mg/70 kg), and placebo, alone and in combination with ethanol (0-0.6 g/kg), were tested in 13 volunteers. Ethanol alone produced only a few significant behavioral effects. Alprazolam and buspirone produced comparable dose-related increases in participant ratings of sedation, but only alprazolam impaired performance. The buspirone-ethanol and alprazolam-ethanol combinations produced robust sedative-like participant-related drug effects that were similar in magnitude, but, in general, only the alprazolam-ethanol combinations impaired performance. These findings suggest that the participant-rated effects of therapeutic doses of buspirone in combination with moderate doses of ethanol are similar to those of therapeutic doses of alprazolam in combination with ethanol, but the performance-impairing effects of buspirone are distinguishable from those of alprazolam, alone and in combination with ethanol.