The present study investigated the proportionality of exposure after single oral doses of 100, 200, 400, and 800 mg of eprosartan, a nonpeptide, nonbiphenyl angiotensin II receptor antagonist, in 23 healthy young men. Eprosartan was safe and well tolerated. Exposure to eprosartan increased with dose but in a less than proportional manner. For each two-fold dose increase, area under the concentration--time curve (AUC) increased an average of 1.6 to 1.8 times and maximum plasma drug concentration (Cmax) increased an average of 1.5 to 1.8 times. For both parameters, the greatest difference from the dose multiple was observed between the 400- and 800-mg doses. Dose proportionality of eprosartan, as assessed by an equivalence-type approach using the 100-mg dose as the reference and a 30% acceptance region (0.70, 1.43), was achieved for the 200- and 400-mg doses for AUC and the 200-mg dose for Cmax. The observed changes in the pharmacokinetics of eprosartan suggest slight saturation of absorption of eprosartan over the 100- to 800-mg dose range, most likely due to the physicochemical properties of the drug (pH-dependent aqueous solubility and lipophilicity).