The present study was designed to determine whether stress hormones and subjective responses to a psychological stressor were different in nonalcoholic offspring from families with a history of alcohol dependence (family history positive, FHP) than in nonalcoholic offspring without a family history of alcohol dependence (family history negative, FHN). Forty-five healthy subjects (17 FHP, 28 FHN), between the ages of 18 and 29 years, completed the Trier Social Stress Test (TSST). The TSST consisted of 5 min of public speaking followed by 5 min of mental arithmetic. Three baseline and five post-TSST blood samples were drawn. Pre-and post-TSST self-report measures of anxiety were obtained. Cortisol, adrenocorticotropin (ACTH), and prolactin significantly increased in response to the TSST in the entire study sample (F (1,187) ¼ 70.22, po0.001, F (1,143) ¼ 33, po0.001, and F (1,134) ¼ 14.37, po0.001, respectively). Cortisol responses were influenced by an interaction between racial composition and family history of alcoholism (F (1,57) ¼ 4.50, p ¼ 0.038). Among Caucasian subjects, FHP subjects had greater cortisol response to the TSST compared to FHN subjects (F (1,57) ¼ 4.45, p ¼ 0.039). No family history effect was identified in African-American subjects. Adrenocorticotropin responses did not differ between FHP and FHN subjects. Adrenocorticotropin response was positively associated with baseline ACTH levels in FHN subjects (t ¼ 5.02, p ¼ o0.001), but not in FHP subjects. Prolactin responses did not differ between FHP and FHN subjects. Anxiety response scores (post-TSST scores minus pre-TSST scores) were higher in FHP subjects compared with FHN subjects (z ¼ À2.67, p ¼ 0.007). In addition, anxiety response scores were positively associated with cortisol response levels to the TSST in FHN subjects (t ¼ 4.52, po0.001). In contrast, anxiety responses were negatively associated with cortisol responses in FHP subjects (t ¼ À2.30, p ¼ 0.024). Our findings are consistent with theories that greater reactivity to stress is associated with greater risks for alcoholism. Furthermore, the findings suggest that the association between the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis hormonal response and the subjective perception of stress might be deranged in offspring of alcoholics.