SUMMARY The sensitivity and specificity of various serologic tests for antibodies to Toxoplasma gondii were compared in 1,000 naturally exposed sows, using isolation of viable T gondii as the definitive test. Serum samples obtained from heart blood of 1,000 sows from Iowa were examined for T gondii antibodies by use of the modified agglutination test ( mat ), latex agglutination test ( lat ), indirect hemagglutination test ( ihat ), and elisa . Toxoplasma gondii was isolated from 170 hearts of 1,000 sows by bioassays in mice and cats. The percentage of samples diagnosed as positive for each of the serologic tests was: mat = 22.2% (titer ≥ 1:20), ihat = 6.4% (titer ≥ 1:64), lat = 10.4% (titer ≥ 1: 64), and elisa = 24.1% (OD > 0.360). The sensitivity and specificity of these tests were calculated respectively to be: 82.9 and 90.29% for mat , 29.4 and 98.3% for ihat , 45.9 and 96.9% for lat , and 72.9 and 85.9% for elisa . The dye test was run at 1:20 dilution on only 893 sera because of bacterial contamination and presence of anticomplement substances. Dye test antibodies were found in 17.8% of the sera, and sensitivity and specificity were 54.4 and 90.8%, respectively. Thus, the mat had the highest sensitivity among all serologic tests used.