Membrane and cytoplasmic changes were observed after in vitro fertilization of hamster oocytes by examining freeze‐fracture replicas. The density of intramembranous particles on areas of membrane between microvilli increased following fertilization. Although the intramembranous particle density of microvilli is higher than that on the intermicrovillar membrane of unfertilized eggs, it did not change significantly after fertilization. Cytoplasmic changes in the Golgi complex and mitochondria upon fertilization indicate a change in cellular activity. Lipid binding probes were applied to the oocyte membranes in order to study the distribution of specific lipids before and after fertilization. Probes included the B‐hydroxy‐steroid complexing molecules, filipin and tomatin, and an anionic lipid binding antibiotic, polymyxin B. Both tomatin and filipin complex with steroids in the P and E faces of the plasma membrane (including the polar bodies), cortical granules and vesicles deeper in the cytoplasm, and the Golgi complex, leaving mitochondria, pronuclei, endoplasmic reticulum, and the majority of vesicles unlabeled. Polymyxin B binding is dependent on its application before or after fixation or in association with EGTA. With its application we detected both minor membrane perturbations of wrinkles and particle redistributions and major perturbations of vesicle fusions, the formation of blebs, and the loss of membrane morphology. Neither the distribution nor apparent quantity of these probes changed overall following fertilization, but this impression does not include specific sites of sperm‐egg fusion.