This study examined the effects of ethnicity and hypertension on beta 2-adrenergic receptors and on plasma catecholamines in a group of 77 unmedicated mildly hypertensive and normotensive men. Black hypertensive subjects had the most sensitive and white hypertensive subjects the least sensitive beta-receptors (as assessed by isoproterenol-stimulated cyclic AMP in lymphocytes [P = .02]). In contrast, postreceptor adenylate cyclase activation (as assessed by forskolin stimulation) was similar among groups. As with beta-receptor sensitivity, black hypertensive subjects had the highest beta-receptor density and white hypertensive subjects the lowest (P = .03). Blacks demonstrated lower plasma epinephrine values compared with whites (P = .03). Across all subjects, plasma epinephrine was negatively correlated with beta-receptor density (r = -.26, P < .05) and sensitivity (r = -.25, P < .05). There were no group differences in binding affinity to the beta-antagonist iodopindolol. The findings support the notion of increased beta-adrenergic receptors in hypertension in blacks.