To assess the potential for competition between fruit-eating birds and bats, we quantified overlap in their use of fruit in a matrix of disturbed and undisturbed tropical forest. Seeds were obtained from 897 bats (31 species) and 200 birds (29 species) mist-netted over 2.5 yr. We calculated pairwise overlap in fruit diet by the simplified Morisita index for those frugivore species with the most diet data (11 bats and 7 birds). Overlap was 0 for 70% of the bird-bat species pairs, and less than 0.05 for the remainder. Two tanagers, Tachyphonus surinamus and Tangara schrankii, had greater dietary overlap with bats than did other bird species. Cluster analysis based on diet overlap separated birds and bats into different clusters. Correspondence analysis was used to reduce the dimensionality of the frugivore × fruit diet matrix. The first axis separated bats and the fruits on which they primarily fed from birds and their major fruits and was related to fruit length, type, and color. The second axis separated the frugivorous bats by size and was correlated with fruit length and plant growth form. Six fruits were eaten by both bats and birds: Phytolacca rivinoides, Marcgravia sp., Souroubea guianensis, Philodendron cuneatum, Coussapoa villosa, and Havetiopsis flavida. As a group, these shared fruits comprised a minor fraction (< 4%) of most bat diets, but a larger fraction (> 10%) of most bird diets. These shared fruits were morphologically similar to those eaten by birds (arillate or berry-like, brightly colored exterior or aril), suggesting bats may be sampling "bird fruits".