We report the design of an ultra-low-power 32-channel neural-recording integrated circuit (chip) in a 0.18 m CMOS technology. The chip consists of eight neural recording modules where each module contains four neural amplifiers, an analog multiplexer, an A/D converter, and a serial programming interface. Each amplifier can be programmed to record either spikes or LFPs with a programmable gain from 49–66 dB. To minimize the total power consumption, an adaptive-biasing scheme is utilized to adjust each amplifier's input-referred noise to suit the background noise at the recording site. The amplifier's input-referred noise can be adjusted from 11.2 (total power of 5.4 W) down to 5.4 (total power of 20 W) in the spike-recording setting. The ADC in each recording module digitizes the a.c. signal input to each amplifier at 8-bit precision with a sampling rate of 31.25 kS/s per channel, with an average power consumption of 483 nW per channel, and, because of a.c. coupling, allows d.c. operation over a wide dynamic range. It achieves an ENOB of 7.65, resulting in a net efficiency of 77 fJ/State, making it one of the most energy-efficient designs for neural recording applications. The presented chip was successfully tested in an in vivo wireless recording experiment from a behaving primate with an average power dissipation per channel of 10.1 W. The neural amplifier and the ADC occupy areas of 0.03 mm and 0.02 mm respectively, making our design simultaneously area efficient and power efficient, thus enabling scaling to high channel-count systems.