The objective of this study was to determine the correlation between ingestive behaviour, apparent digestibility and residual feed intake (RFI) of nishing Nellore bulls fed a high concentrate diet. One hundred and twenty Nellore bulls, housed in individual pens, were evaluated in individual performance tests. The animals were fed a high concentrate diet (23:77roughage/concentrate ratio). The animals were classi ed as: low RFI, medium RFI, and high RFI. Data from ten animals from each group was used. Faecal production and nutrient digestibility were calculated using indigestible neutral detergent ber as an internal marker. The feeding behaviour was evaluated over twenty-four hours by direct observation every ve minutes. The most e cient animals (low RFI, 8.58 kg DM/day) consumed 27.62% less feed than the least e cient animals (high RFI, 10.95 kg DM/day). Animals with medium e ciency (mean RFI, 9.49 kg DM/day) consumed 15.39% less than high RFI. Nutrient digestibility coe cients were similar except for ether extract (P<0.03) which was 8% greater for the high-RFI animals. No effect was observed for ingestive behaviour (P>0.05). Animals spent, on average, three hours twenty-eight minutes feeding, seven hours thirty-two minutes ruminating and thirteen hours forty minutes in idle time. In the present study, ingestive behaviour and dry matter digestibility were not responsible for between-animal variation in residual feed intake in Nellore bulls fed a high concentrate diet.Also, the impact of digestion of feed to explain differences in RFI has been controversial. For instance, Potts et al. (2017) observed that digestibility explained none of the variation in RFI for dairy cows eating high starch diets, but it explained 9 to 31% of the variation in RFI with cows fed low starch diets. (De La Torre et al., 2015) found that in Charolais cows, digestibility is responsible for signi cant differences in RFI, irrespective of the type of diet. On the contrary, Dykier et al. (2020) stated that digestibility was not responsible for feed e ciency in beef steers. However, it is unclear if the improved ability of feed-e cient animals is inherent or a function of a slower passage of feed through the rumen due to lower intake.Further research is needed to better understand the biological mechanism between divergent classes of RFI in respect to breed, type of diet, sex, age and environmental conditions. The present study hypothesises that RFI is related to the digestibility and ingestive behaviour of Nellore bulls on nishing rations. Therefore, this study aimed to determine the correlation between ingestive behaviour, apparent digestibility and residual feed intake (RFI) of nishing Nellore bulls fed high concentrate diet.