The effects of protracted cocaine administration (15 mg/kg i.p., twice a day for 9 days) on the circadian pattern of feeding behavior was studied in individually housed male Sprague-Dawley rats, maintained under a 12:12 light:dark cycle. Water and food were available ad libitum and food intake was measured twice a day before, during and after withdrawal of cocaine (or saline) treatment. Neither total 24-h food intake, nor body mass at the end of the experiment, was significantly different between cocaine-treated and control animals. However, cocaine administration affected the temporal distribution of food consumption. During the dark (activity) phase, rats receiving cocaine injections consumed significantly less food than control animals, and this effect persisted for up to 3 days of cocaine withdrawal. During the light (rest) phase, cocaine administration promoted food consumption and a significantly higher food intake was also observed during the first five cocaine withdrawal days. Continuous monitoring of locomotor activity did not reveal significant changes in the circadian pattern of activity between the two experimental groups during different treatment periods, except for an acute increase in locomotion within an hour after daytime cocaine injection. The results of this study demonstrate that sub-chronic cocaine administration alters the circadian pattern of rats' feeding behavior.