Interactions between hydrated Ce 3+ and various carboxylates are of fundamental interest. Anomalously strong interactions with Ce 3+ occur when diglycolic acid (DGA) is added into a Ce 3+ aqueous solution, unlike various other carboxylic acids. Herein, the complex-formation constants of Ce 3+ with these acids are evaluated via absorption and emission spectra. Hydrated Ce 3+ emits fluorescence with unity quantum yield; however, addition of various carboxylates statically quenches the fluorescence when Ce 3+ −carboxylate complexes form because the fluorescence lifetime is constant irrespective of the carboxylate concentration. In the observed static quenching, the complex-formation constants obtained from the absorption and emission spectra (K abs and K em ) agree well. The binding of Ce 3+ by the conjugate Lewis bases, i.e., carboxylates, is approximately inversely proportional to the pH. Adding DGA into the system also statically quenches the fluorescence, but far more efficiently, even in a much weaker solution. We rigorously deduce K abs and K em of Ce 3+ with DGA without any approximation using comparable concentrations. Careful fittings provide equivalent K em and K abs values, and by varying the pH and ionic strength, we confirm that this equivalence is an inherent property of the Ce 3+ −DGA system. The Lewis acid−base theory cannot explain why DGA binds to Ce 3+ ∼1000 times more strongly than the other carboxylates. This anomalously strong binding may be due to a chelate effect caused by the DGA's central oxygen atom, which forms a five-membered ring with the conjugate Lewis bases of DGA; double chelate rings can also form, while bis-deprotonated DGA binds to Ce 3+ , facilitated by the central oxygen. Therefore, DGA enables efficient quenching through the chelate effect when it binds to Ce 3+ .