Olfactory learning in the honeybee was investigated using the conditioned proboscis extension reflex on restrained individuals. We compared, under the same experimental conditions, the most commonly used conditioning procedures, i.e. 1 trial, 3 massed trials (1 min inter-trial intervals), and 3 spaced trials (10 min inter-trial intervals) procedures, using linalool as the conditioned stimulus. Two experiments were performed in which worker bees were subjected to: (1) a single test at different times (30 s to 14 days) after the conditioning procedure; (2) a first test within 3 h after the conditioning procedure, and were then retested daily (up to 5 tests). The memory trace of a learnt odorant stimulus could last for the lifetime of the bee, even after a single association with sugar. Repeated tests with 1 day inter-test duration induced a strong decrease of the response level, this effect being more pronounced after a 1-trial conditioning.