Background: Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) providers are treating more comorbid conditions with additional pharmacologic agents, resulting in patients with HIV being disproportionately at risk for clinically significant drug–drug interactions (CSDDIs). There is a potential to overlook these interactions and ultimately place patients at risk for drug toxicity, resistance, and virologic failure. Objective: To assess the burden of CSDDIs among patients receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART) within 24 hours of admission and to evaluate the effect of a clinical pharmacist operating through an antiretroviral stewardship (ARVSP) program in identifying and correcting potential drug interactions. Methods: Adult HIV-positive patients receiving ART who were admitted to The Brooklyn Hospital Center from November 2010 through January 2012 were included in the analysis. Drug interactions were categorized according to time frame (ie, within 24 hours of admission vs after 24 hours of admission) and type (ie, contraindicated combinations, dosage modifications, and frequency alterations). The Liverpool HIV drug reference, Micromedex drug database, and the Department of Health and Human Services Guidelines were used as comprehensive tools for identification of antiretroviral drug errors. Results: Eighty-four CSDDIs were identified from 252 admissions among 158 patients receiving ART during the study period. Of the identified CSDDIs, 61 (73%) occurred within 24 hours of admission and 23 (27%) later in the hospital course. Forty-eight drug interactions (57%) represented contraindicated drug combinations. Protease inhibitor–based regimens were associated with the highest percentage of CSDDIs (98%). Of all CSDDIs, the most common interacting drug class was acid-suppressive therapy (63%). Clinical pharmacists identified and intervened in 80% of the CSDDIs that occurred on patient admission with all interventions accepted. Conclusions: CSDDIs are common among patients receiving ART at the time of admission and throughout the hospital course. Interventions including medication review by clinical pharmacists are critical in the prevention of CSDDIs on admission.