The prevalence of both e1 and e2 antigens in 1,158 sera of asymptomatic HBsAg carriers, carriers in hemodialysis units, and HBsAg-negative blood donors was examined. The detection rate of e1 antigen was as high as 80% in asymptomatic carriers, 95% in hemodialysis patients, and even 13.1% in HBsAg-negative donors. All of the e1 antigen-positive specimens in such HBsAg-negative sera were found to have both or either anti-HBs and anti-HBc, suggesting the past history of Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection of the donors. In the HBsAg-positive serum, the detection rate of e2 antigen (17%) was lower than that of e1 (80%), and all sera having e2 antigen were positive for e1 antigen. The titers of HBsAg, HBcAg, and anti-HBc in e2 antigen-positive sera were higher than that of sera detecting only e1 antigen. The appearance of e1 antigen and e2 antigen in the course of post-transfusion hepatitis B was studied with five cases. Retrospective study showed that three of them each received one unit of HBsAg-positive blood, and the other two received HBsAg-negative blood but with high-titered anti-HBc. In four cases out of five, in which e2 antigen was detected during the course of infection, the initial detection of e2 antigen occurred at or just before the elevation of liver enzyme levels. On the other hand, e1 antigen was detected relatively early after transfusion, and the time of onset. Moreover, the detection period of e1 antigen persisted longer, even after the disappearance of HBsAg antigenemia. These two separate studies suggest that not only e2 antigen but also e1 antigen are associated with the infection of HBV, but they are distinct from each other; the e2 antigen may have the properties of a signal of the viral activity in the patient as suggested by many others, but e1 antigen does not seem to bear such diagnostic values.