While chemotherapy based on alkylating agents has been the standard treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) for decades, purine analogues and their combinations have emerged as effective new therapies for previously untreated and pretreated patients. As single agents, fludarabine and cladribine are the most promising, showing higher remission rates compared to chlorambucil. For younger and physically fit patients, the combination of fludarabine and cyclophosphamide has shown benefit. Fludarabine plus epirubicin appears equally potent. The addition of monoclonal antibodies, such as rituximab and alemtuzumab, to purine analogues alone or in combination seems to be even more effective for chemotherapy-naive and pretreated CLL patients. Another promising agent in the armamentarium of therapies for CLL is bendamustine, which has properties of both an alkylating agent and a purine analogue. Clinical trials are ongoing with novel drugs that interfere with cell cycle regulation and signaling molecules in CLL, including flavopiridol, UCN-01, bryostatin 1, depsipeptide, and oblimersen. It remains to be seen whether these chemotherapeutic approaches offer real benefit for patients by prolonging survival with an improved quality of life.