c-Myc is an oncogenic transcription factor capable of activating transcription by all three nuclear RNA polymerases, thus acting as a high-level coordinator of protein synthesis capacity and cell growth rate. c-Myc recruits RNA polymerase I-related transcription factors to the rDNA when quiescent cells are stimulated to re-enter the cell cycle. Using a model system of cell lines with variable c-Myc status, we show that on stimulation c-Myc rapidly induces gene loop structures in rDNA chromatin that juxtapose upstream and downstream rDNA sequences. c-Myc activation is both necessary and sufficient for this change in rDNA chromatin conformation. c-Myc activation induces association of TTF-1 with the rDNA, and c-Myc is physically associated with induced rDNA gene loops. The origins of two or more rDNA gene loops are closely juxtaposed, suggesting the possibility that c-Myc induces nucleolar chromatin hubs. Induction of rDNA gene loops may be an early step in the reprogramming of quiescent cells as they re-enter the growth cycle.