The occurrence of interchange reactions during heating of polypivalolactone (PPVL) with three polymers and their influence on the blend properties were studied. Physical blends of PPVL and bisphenol-A polycarbonate (PC) were found to be immiscible. By heating of PPVL/PC blends in the melt at 280°C, in diphenyl ether at 260°C and in a twin-screw extruder (TSE) at 280°C partial formation of copolymers was observed, provided that tetrabutyl orthotitanate (TnBT) was added. After heating of equimolar PPVL/PC blends in a TSE for 15 min, a PPVL-PC block copolymer could be isolated containing 25 mol-% pivalolactone (PVL) units. The results from thermal analyses indicated that PPVL/PC blends had become more miscible, due to the presence of copolymers formed by interchange reactions. After heating of equimolar mixtures of PPVL and a polyarylate (PAr) in a TSE for 15 min, PPVL-PAr copolymers with 5 mol-% PVL units could be isolated. Probably due to this low degree of interchange, no effect on the miscibility of the initially immiscible PPVL/PAr blends could be observed. PPVL/poly(butylene terephthalate) (PBT) blends, obtained after heating in a TSE, decomposed at a temperature between the melting temperatures of PPVL and PBT, indicating that interchange reactions may have occurred