The presence of antibodies against Norwalk virus (NV) was studied in sera from different Venezuelan populations, using an enzyme immuno-assay (EIA) based on recombinant NV protein. Antibodies to NV were found in 47%-53% of urban subjects from Caracas, 83% of rural subjects from the west of the country, and 73%-93% of Amerindian subjects. The prevalences found in the rural and Amerindian groups were significantly higher than that in the urban group. Although about 50% of the children studied were seropositive for NV by the age of 5 years, only four (0.4%) of 1120 faecal samples from children with diarrhoea which were tested for the presence of NV antigen by sandwich EIA were found positive. An increase of at least 4-fold in the titre of anti-NV IgA was found in three (5%) of 61 pairs of sera taken during and 1 month after an acute episode of diarrhoea not due to rotavirus. NV was therefore not a predominant aetiological cause of gastro-enteritis in young children in Venezuela between 1993 and 1995, although it can be the cause of diarrhoea in infants.