For almost four decades, the chiral fungicides metalaxyl and furalaxyl have been in use in plant protection on a global scale. Both substances are distributed as racemic mixtures, yet the desirable interference in nucleic acid synthesis of harmful fungi only occurs by the (‐)‐R‐enantiomer. As enantioselective degradation in Scheyern (Germany) and Yaoundé (Cameroon) soils has been documented, the influence of 50 isolated microorganisms on the R/S ratio was investigated. A high‐pressure liquid chromatography method with a chiral column to separate enantiomers of metalaxyl and furalaxyl, and subsequent detection by tandem mass spectrometry, was employed. Only one of these microorganisms, a strain of Brevibacillus brevis, showed an enantioselective degradation pattern in liquid culture; the respective (‐)‐R‐enantiomers were preferably degraded. Moreover, (‐)‐R‐furalaxyl was degraded faster in cultures supplemented simultaneously with both fungicides of the same concentration. Chirality 25:336–340, 2013. © 2013 Wiley‐Liss Inc. Chirality 00:000‐000:, 2013. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.