The viscoelastic behavior of a RP46 polyimide resin is characterized at high temperature and the results are used within a micromechanical model to predict the viscoelastic response of a RP46 based carbon fiber composite. The creep master curve of the neat resin is obtained using the time temperature superposition principle (TTSP) from creep tests at three different temperatures, namely 180, 220, and 270 C. The viscoelastic behavior of RP46 is modeled based on Schapery's single integral constitutive equation whose Prony Series coefficients are obtained from the master curve. The acquired properties are then incorporated into a Simplified Unit Cell Micromechanical model to study the creep response of a RP46 resin based composite system. The advantage of this particular micromechanical model lies in its ability to give closed form expressions for the effective viscoelastic response of unidirectional composites as well as each of their constituents. Two types of nonlinearities were observed, one due to stress and the other due to temperature.