The author examines the eþect of fear of sexual victimization on fear of crime among adolescents. Criminologists have indicated that gender is one of the strongest predictors of fear of crime : Women are more fearful than men. Some authors (Warr 1984, and Ferraro 1995, among others) have suggested that this diþerential fear among women can mostly be attributed to their inordinate fear of sexual victimization. This relationship, however, has only been examined among adults. Using a sample of 725 adolescents, the eþect of fear of sexual victimization and other demographic and contextual variables on fear of criminal victimization is examined. Results indicate that fear of sexual victimization is the best predictor of fear of nonsexual victimization, whereas the eþects of other variables are contingent on race and gender. The reasons for this ünding, as well as the implications for social policies, are discussed.Other than domestic assault, sexual assault is the only crime by which women are more likely to be victimized than men (Ringel 1997). Thus, it would make intuitive sense that women would be more fearful of sexual assault than their male counterparts. Until recently, however, one of the most well-accepted ündings in the literature examining fear of criminal victimization was that females are more fearful of victimization by all crimes