Cu-based catalysts are ubiquitous in many industrial reactions, including methanol synthesis. Under partially oxidizing conditions, Cu catalysts can have dynamic surface structures that greatly influence their reactivities. Therefore, elucidating the surface structures that are present on Cu, and looking for metastable structures, aids in the long term goal of understanding and controlling their catalytic behavior. Thin-film copper oxides such as the "29" and "44" structures have been described at length in the literature, but precursors to these thinfilm oxides can be challenging to study because they exist only under certain conditions. Using a combination of experimental and computational surface science techniques, we discovered, modeled, and quantified a previously unreported O atom adlayer structure on Cu(111) with a p(2 × 1) unit cell. We used scanning tunneling microscopy to visualize the striped 2 × 1 structure and density functional theory (DFT) structure optimizations to identify the thermodynamically most favorable positions of Cu and O atoms in a p(2 × 1) unit cell. Using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and temperature-programmed desorption, we determined the stoichiometry of the structure to be 2:1 for surface Cu atoms to O adatoms, the same stoichiometry as that modeled by DFT. This work reports a new metastable structure formed on Cu(111) at the very initial stages of oxidation and is therefore worth considering in models of catalytically relevant redox processes at Cu surfaces.