 The study examined parent support for policies to reduce unhealthy food and beverage marketing to children and adolescents, and identified racial, ethnic, and other socio-demographic characteristics that predict support. Parents agreed that food marketing negatively impacts their children's eating habits and supported food marketing-related policies. Perceived negative impact predicted support, with highest levels among Black and Hispanic parents. Finding suggests that families of color would welcome policies limiting unhealthy food marketing to youth in their communities, and issues of targeted marketing and disproportionate exposure to unhealthy food marketing by Black and Hispanic youth may be incorporated into campaigns to address food justice and health inequities in communities of color. This article was authored by Frances Fleming-Millisey, Jennifer L. Harris and Silu.