Composite silica-alginate nanoparticles were prepared via silica sol-gel technique using a water-in-oil microemulsion system. In our system, cyclohexane served as the bulk oil phase into which aqueous solutions of sodium alginate were dispersed as droplets that confined nanoparticle formation after addition of tetraethylorthosilicate (TEOS). Our studies showed that much of the particle growth is completed within the first 24 hours and reaction times up to 120 hours only resulted in an additional 5% increase in particle diameter. Average particle size was found to decrease with increasing water-to-surfactant molar ratio (R) and with increasing cocentration of alginate in the aqueous phase. The potential for drug loading during particle formation was demonstrated using rhodamine B as a model drug. In vitro release studies showed that particles incubated in pH 2.5 phosphate buffer released only about 7% of the drug load in 27 days, while 42% was released in pH 7.5 phosphate buffer over the same period. Analysis of the release profile suggested that rhodamine B was homogeneously distributed throughout the particle and that the drug diffusivity was 40-fold greater in pH 7.5 buffer compared to that at pH 2.5. These results suggest that silica-alginate nanoparticles could be used as a pH-responsive drug carrier for controlled drug release.