The present study was designed to assess the effects of age and hearing loss on the time course of backward masking. Thresholds for detecting a 10-ms, 500-Hz tone were measured as a function of the temporal separation between the signal and a 50-ms broadband masker in normal-hearing young listeners (18–25), normal-hearing older adults (65–82), and hearing-impaired older adults. Younger subjects exhibited less initial masking, had steeper recovery functions, and asymptoted closer to their unmasked thresholds than either group of older adults. Comparisons between the normal-hearing and hearing-impaired older individuals indicated a slower time course of recovery from backward masking for listeners with hearing loss. Differences between the two groups of normal-hearing listeners (young and old) suggest that age, independent of hearing loss, affects the temporal course of backward masking. Differences between the normal-hearing and hearing-impaired elderly listeners, however, indicate that age-related hearing impairment may also alter the rate of recovery from backward masking. [Work supported by the Brookdale Foundation and NIA.]