Two types of alcohol-specific microbial/electrochemical biosensors have been developed using specially constructed mutant cells of the methylotrophic yeast Hansenula polymorpha. The cells were immobilized in a calcium alginate gel, and placed between two membranes on the surface of oxygen or hydrogen peroxide-electrodes. The O2 electrode based biosensor contained mutant cells with strongly elevated alcohol oxidase activity. The peroxide electrode based biosensor consisted of catalase-defective mutant cells which produce hydrogen peroxide in the presence of alcohol. Both types of mutant cells were used in permeabilized form in order to release some components of the cellular respiration system, thus increasing the selectivity of the cellular respiration response to alcohol (cell/O2-biosensor) Permeabilization also increased sensitivity of the signal and shortened the response time (cell/H2O2-biosensor). Cell/O2 biosensors were linear up to 1.2 mM for ethanol and 0.35 mM for methanol, cell/H2O2 biosensors were linear up to 4.0 mM for ethanol, and 1.2 mM for methanol. Results were reproducible, sample pretreatment was not required, and the sensors exhibited good operational and storage stability. The use of sucrose, dulcitol or inositol during the preparation of the sensors resulted in increased stability of cells during their liophilization and storage in the dried state. Both biosensors had similar selectivity towards alcohols in the order of methanol (100%), ethanol (21%), and formaldehyde (12%). No signal was observed with glucose or glycerol as substrates.