Air-fired barium titanate samples doped with cerium, neodymium, samarium, gadolinium, dysprosium, erbium,
or ytterbium were examined by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR). Reducing atmosphere-fired europium-doped barium titanate was also investigated with EPR. Each dopant was studied in both Ba- and Ti-rich
(Ba/Ti = 1.01, 0.99) samples. Point charge calculations were used to predict the EPR spectrum of each
lanthanide in A- and B-sites. Different EPR spectra are expected for A- versus B-site substitution when Ce3+,
Sm3+, Dy3+, and Yb3+ are the dopants. The experimentally observed Ba/Ti doping behavior of Ce3+ in BaTiO3
suggests that as a 3+ cation it is on the A-site. No EPR active signal was observed for Sm3+ in BaTiO3. Eu2+
and Gd3+, as previously discussed in the literature, were found to be an A-site dopant and amphoteric,
respectively. Dy3+ was found to be a B-site dopant with an EPR signal intensity suggesting amphoteric behavior,
whereas Yb3+ showed only B-site occupancy. Nd3+ and Er3+ could not easily be assigned to a particular site
by EPR methods alone. We also discuss the lanthanide dopant's effect on the observed levels of titanium
vacancies, barium vacancies, and Mn2+ impurities.