In plant cells, anion channels and transporters are essential for key functions such as nutrition, ion homeostasis and, resistance to biotic or abiotic stresses. In Arabidopsis thaliana, members of the ChLoride Channel (CLC) family located on the tonoplast have been shown to be required for nitrate homeostasis (AtCLCa, AtCLCb) or involved in salt tolerance (AtCLCc). In this study, we identified and characterized the chloride channel AtCLCg in A. thaliana. Use of an AtCLCg:GFP fusion revealed the localization of this protein on the tonoplast. Studies on the disruption of the AtCLCg gene by a T-DNA insertion in two independent lines demonstrated that AtCLCg is involved in response to salt stress and not in nitrate homeostasis in our conditions. Although no difference in shoot and root NO3- content is observed, mutant plants show a phenotype compared to wild-type when they are grown on 75 mM NaCl: (i) a decrease by 20% of total plant fresh weight; (ii) a diminution by 16% of primary root length and a reduction by 19% of secondary root number; (iii) an over-accumulation of chloride and sulfate in shoots by 21% and 26% respectively. These phenotypes are abolished in complemented lines with 35S::AtCLCg. atclcg mutants show a similar phenotype in the presence of 75 mM KCl, but no difference is detected in response to 140 mM mannitol. This result suggests that the hypersensitivity phenotype of atclcg mutant depends on the ionic component and not on osmotic effect of salt stress.Knowing that AtCLCg and AtCLCc share a high degree of homology, approximately 75% of identity at protein level, and both are involved in response to salt stress, we generated a clcc/clcg double mutant. Phenotypic analysis showed that the two KO mutations do not have additive effect under salt stress of 75 mM NaCl. In parallel, gene expression analysis showed that AtCLCg is repressed in the clcc mutant background, and conversely. Expression analysis of reporter gene displayed a different pattern for PAtCLCg::GUS, strongly expressed in mesophyll cells, compared with a strong expression of PAtCLCc::GUS in guard cells and pollen. Altogether these results demonstrate that both AtCLCc and AtCLCg are involved in response to salt stress but they are not functionally redundant.