Four cracked corn-based diets supplemented with 0, 5, 10 and 15% soybean meal (SBM) were fed to weaned male Holstein calves to study effects of protein level on digestibility and nitrogen balance, in one trial, and on feed intake, in another. Twelve calves were used in each trial in a replicated 4 x 4 Latin square design. Calves were 9 to 12 weeks of age at the start of the experiment and diets ranged from 9.9 to 16.2% crude protein (CP). In trial 1; feed intake was restricted to 80 g dry matter (DM) per kilogram metabolic body weight (W-75). There was a linear change (P less than .01) in apparent DM digestibility, increasing from 71.1% with the low protein diet to 75.1% with the high protein diet. Similar significant trends were observed in digestibility of organic matter (71.2 to 75.3%), nitrogen (61.6 to 72.2%), acid detergent fiber (36.2 to 44.8%) and starch (86.3 to 89.7%). Fecal starch decreased, from 28.4 to 22.1% of DM, and fecal pH increased, from 5.21 to 5.52, as SBM was substituted for corn; both of these trends were significant (P less than .01), linear component); they were also correlated (r = .55, P less than .01). Nitrogen (N) retention increased with dietary protein level (P less than .01, linear component), from 9.0 to 10.9 to 11.9 to 13.2 g N/kg digestible organic matter intake for diets 1 through 4, respectively. The same percentage of nitrogen intake was retained on all diets, but the amount of absorbed nitrogen that was retained decreased with dietary protein level (P less than .01, linear component) from 63.0% with 9.9% CP to 51.4% with 16.2% CP. In trial 2, voluntary feed intake averaged 98.2, 110.1, 106.3 and 106.5 g DM/W-75 for diets 1 to 4, respectively, (P less than .05, quadratic component). Live weight gain increased in a linear manner (P less than .01) with increasing CP, from .77kg/day with diet 1 to 1.22 kg/day with diet 4.