The role of ventral striatum in the maintenance and transmission of a hypothalamic intracranial self-stimulation (ICSS) reward signal was investigated using the rate-frequency multiple-curve shift paradigm. The excitotoxin N-methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA) was bilaterally administered into the nucleus accumbens (15 micrograms per side), the ventral pallidum (15 micrograms per side) or the juncture between the two structures (20 micrograms per side) creating three lesion groups. Both the nucleus accumbens (NAC) lesion group and the ventral pallidum (VP) lesion group displayed substantial NMDA-induced damage which was generally restricted to the intended limbic structure. The NMDA lesions in the third group displayed extensive damage to both the NAC and VP, as intended, but also typically diffused into adjacent medial structures. NMDA-induced lesions in all groups caused a suppression in motor/performance activity at all currents tested. Contrary to motor effects, reward efficacy was relatively unaffected for the NAC and VP groups. The lack of reward effects may be due to plasticity of neuronal systems and redundancy of circuit connections. However, this explanation is questionable given the fact that NMDA lesions which encompassed both the NAC and VP had little effect on reward efficacy. The above data suggests that the nucleus accumbens and the ventral pallidum are not critical for ICSS rewards stimulation and that hypothalamic ICSS reward signals are processed downstream from these limbic structures.