The effects of systemic injections of the dopaminergic antagonist haloperidol on the acquisition of the Morris water maze with either a visible or an invisible platform (nonspatial vs. spatial learning) were investigated. An open field test was used for selecting a dosage (< or = 0.1 mg/kg), that (hardly) affected locomotor behaviour. Differential effects were found. At 0.1 mg/kg, haloperidol reduced locomotion in the open field, impaired acquisition in the Morris maze with a visible platform, and blocked escape onto an invisible one. Even though 0.07 mg/kg haloperidol reduced locomotion, both 0.04 and 0.07 mg/kg only impaired Morris maze performance in the spatial version. A large effect was found in the first trial of every day's training block. These results indicate that haloperidol at low doses can lead to a moderate but significant impairment of spatial learning. It is suggested that the effects found are related to the function of the striatal areas in cue- and noncue-directed behaviour.