Noncovalent interactions between molecules are key for many biological processes. Necessarily, when molecules interact, the electronic charge in each of them is redistributed. Here, we show experimentally that, in chiral molecules, charge redistribution is accompanied by spin polarization. We describe how this spin polarization adds an enantioselective term to the forces, so that homochiral interaction energies differ from heterochiral ones. The spin polarization was measured by using a modified Hall effect device. An electric field that is applied along the molecules causes charge redistribution, and for chiral molecules, a Hall voltage is measured that indicates the spin polarization. Based on this observation, we conjecture that the spin polarization enforces symmetry constraints on the biorecognition process between two chiral molecules, and we describe how these constraints can lead to selectivity in the interaction between enantiomers based on their handedness. Model quantum chemistry calculations that rigorously enforce these constraints show that the interaction energy for methyl groups on homochiral molecules differs significantly from that found for heterochiral molecules at van der Waals contact and shorter (i.e., ∼0.5 kcal/mol at 0.26 nm).spin | chirality | enantioselectivity | biorecognition | exchange interaction T he wealth of information on protein structure has led to a much better understanding of the relation between structure and function in biomolecular processes and biological machines (1); however, basic phenomena remain unexplained in terms of structure-function relationships. Biorecognition, which is based on noncovalent interactions between molecules, retains mysteries, and its calculation evades first principles theory (2, 3). This failure suggests that some essential features are not included in our current description of these interactions (4,5). In this study, we show that charge polarization, which occurs in any biorecognition event, is accompanied by spin polarization for chiral molecules, an effect that is missing in most treatments. The subsequent magnetic interaction energies are small and therefore, play no significant role in the interactions; however, the spin polarization constrains the symmetry of the wave function(s) involved with the intermolecular interaction, so that significant differences in energy emerge for interactions between molecules of the same chirality and those of opposite chirality. Thus, this phenomenon may impact quantitative modeling of biorecognition events and contribute to our understanding of enantiorecognition in nature (6).Nucleotides, amino acids, and sugars are chiral; namely, they do not possess mirror plane symmetry but have symmetry like a "hand" (cheir in Greek). Force field models for the interaction between biomolecules do not account for spin polarization or include terms with chiral symmetry. Noncovalent interactions between biomolecules are commonly described classically by way of force fields, which are constructed from their geometrie...