The obligate intracellular bacterium Chlamydia has a unique developmental cycle that alternates between two contrasting cell types. With a hardy envelope and highly condensed genome, the small elementary body (EB) maintains limited metabolic activities yet survives in extracellular environments and is infectious. After entering host cells, EBs differentiate into larger and proliferating reticulate bodies (RBs). Progeny EBs are derived from RBs in late developmental stages and eventually exit host cells. How expression of the chlamydial genome consisting of nearly 1,000 genes governs the chlamydial developmental cycle is unclear. A previous microarray study identified only 29 Chlamydia trachomatis immediate early genes, defined as genes with increased expression during the first hour postinoculation in cultured cells. In this study, we performed more sensitive RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq) analysis for C. trachomatis cultures with high multiplicities of infection. Remarkably, we observed well over 700 C. trachomatis genes that underwent 2- to 900-fold activation within 1 hour postinoculation. Quantitative reverse transcription real-time PCR analysis was further used to validate the activated expression of a large subset of the genes identified by RNA-Seq. Importantly, our results demonstrate that the immediate early transcriptome is over 20 times more extensive than previously realized. Gene ontology analysis indicates that the activated expression spans all functional categories. We conclude that over 70% of C. trachomatis genes are activated in EBs almost immediately upon entry into host cells, thus implicating their importance in initiating rapid differentiation into RBs and establishing an intracellular niche conducive with chlamydial development and growth.