The iodous acid disproportionation is autocatalytic, and it is not easy to measure the rate constant of the step 2IO 2 H → IO 3 − + IOH + H + separately. Hg(II) was used previously to suppress the autocatalytic pathway, but this method presents difficulties discussed in this work. A more effective method is the use of crotonic acid, an effective IOH scavenger. It suppresses side reactions, and a purely second-order rate law is obtained. The rate constant decreases from 5 to 0.2 M −1 s −1 when the sulfuric acid concentration increases from 0.08 to 0.60 M. The observed decrease could be explained if IO 2 − reacts faster than IO 2 H. This may have consequences for the mechanism of the oscillating Bray-Liebhafsky reaction. C 2013