Airway caliber and lung volume (VL) increase many fold between infancy and adulthood; however, these two components of the lung may not increase proportionately during lung growth and development. We evaluated in infants the rate of emptying during forced expiration from near total lung capacity to residual volume. From the flow-volume curves we calculated (1) a rate constant (k) as the change in flow divided by the change in volume between 50% and 75% of expired forced vital capacity (FVC), and (2) the fraction of the FVC expired in 0.5 s (FEV(0.5)/FVC). Seventeen normal healthy infants were evaluated twice; mean ages (ranges) at first and second tests were 30 (5 to 76) and 58 (28 to 98) wk. Analysis of cross-sectional and longitudinal data indicated that the rate of emptying during forced expiration measured by both parameters was greatest in the youngest infants and decreased during infancy. Our findings are consistent with the concept that younger infants have large airways relative to their VL and that VL increases more rapidly than airway caliber early in life.