Twenty multiparous Friesian cows, 90 +/- 30 days postpartum, were allocated to two groups of ten cows according to calving date, lactation number and daily milk yield, and assigned randomly to one of two diets in a cross-over experiment. The experimental diet consisted of concentrate and maize silage in the proportions 1:1 (dry matter basis) containing either 0 or 10 g niacin per cow per day, which was handmixed into the concentrate. The diets were offered individually as total mixed rations in two equal proportions at 09:00 and 20:00 h in amounts sufficient to ensure 10% refusals. Dry matter, metabolisable energy and crude protein intakes, as well as milk yield, milk protein proportion and yield, milk lactose, total solids and solids-not-fat proportions were not affected by niacin supplementation. In contrast, niacin supplementation increased milk fat proportion and yield. No differences were observed in blood serum concentrations of glucose, total protein, triglycerides, cholesterol, Na, K, Ca, P or Mg. However, the serum concentration of urea was lower when the cows were supplemented with niacin.