Melt rheological properties and extrudate swell of organobentonite-filled polypropylene nanocomposites were studied by using a capillary rheometer in a shear rate range of 50–8000s −1 and a temperature range of 190–210°C. The nanocomposites exhibited shear-thinning behavior and the viscosity was well-described by the power law in this shear rate region. The addition of organobentonite enhanced the pseudoplasticity, i.e. increased the shear thinning behavior. With increasing organobentonite concentration, the shear stress/viscosity increased, while the power law index (n) decreased, and this effect is more significant at higher filler concentrations (>3wt%). The dependence of shear viscosity on temperature obeyed the Arrhenius–Eyring expression, and the activation energy (E a ) decreased with increasing shear rate. Extrudate swell is a non-linear function of shear rate, while it is a linear function of shear stress or temperature. With increasing organobentonite concentration (>3wt%), the extrudate swell clearly decreased, which is attributed to the limitation of the elastic recovery of the polymer chains by oriented silicate layers.