The objectives of this experiment were to determine 1) whether end point temperature interacts with tenderness to affect Warner-Bratzler sheer force of beef longissimus and 2) if so, what impact that interaction would have on tenderness classification. Warner-Bratzler shear force was determined on longissimus thoracis cooked to either 60, 70, or 80 degrees C after 3 and 14 d of aging fi om carcasses of 100 steers and heifers. Warner-Bratzler shear force values (3- and 14-d aged steaks pooled) for steaks cooked to 70 degrees C were used to create five tenderness classes. The interaction of tenderness class and end point temperature was significant (P < .05). The increase in Warner-Bratzler shear force as end point temperature increased was greater (P < .05) for less-tender longissimus than more-tender longissimus (Tenderness Class 5 = 5.1, 7.2, and 8.5 kg and Tenderness Class 1 = 2.4, 3.1, and 3.7 kg, respectively, for 60, 70, and 80 degrees C). The slopes of the regressions of Warner-Bratzler shear force of longissimus cooked to 60 or 80 degrees C against Warner-Brattier shear force of longissimus cooked to 70 degrees C were different (P < .05), providing additional evidence for this interaction, Correlations of Warner-Bratlzer shear force of longissimus cooked to 60 or 80 degrees C with Warner-Brattier shear force of longissimus cooked to 70 degrees C were .90 and .86, respectively. One effect of the interaction of tenderness with end point temperature on tenderness classification was to increase (P < .01) the advantage in shear force of a "Tender" class of beef over "Commodity" beef as end point temperature increased (.24 vs .42 vs .60 kg at 14 d for 60, 70, and 80 degrees C, respectively). When aged 14 d and cooked to 80 degrees C, "Commodity" steaks were six times more likely (P < .01) than "Tender" steaks to have shear force values 2 5 kg (24 vs 4%). The end point temperature used to conduct tenderness classification did not affect classification accuracy, as long as the criterion for "Tender" was adjusted accordingly. However, cooking steaks to a greater end point temperature than was used for classification may reduce classification accuracy. The beef industry could alleviate the detrimental effects on palatability of consumers cooking beef to elevated degrees of doneness by identifying and marketing "Tender" longissimus.