In recent years, the use of antibiotics has greatly increased, which has caused environmental pollution. We offer a photocatalyst based on BiVO4/sulfur-doped g-C3N4 nanocomposite, which was made by a one-step thermal condensation method from thiourea and bismuth vanadate to degradate ciprofloxacin (CIP). The BiVO4/sulfurdoped g-C3N4 photocatalyst was analyzed by certain techniques including XRD, FTIR, BET, FESEM, EDX, TEM, DRS, photoluminesence, and Mott-Schottky to determine various physicochemical properties. The photocatalytic degradation of CIP, as a model pollutant, under visible LED light irradiation was tested to investigate the catalytic performance of nanocomposite. Response Surface Methodology (RSM) was employed to optimize operational parameters, including photocatalyst dosage (50-150 mg), CIP concentration (10-30 mg/L), initial pH of the solution (3-11), and irradiation time (12-120 min). The BiVO4/sulfur-doped g-C3N4 nanocomposite, with a narrow bandgap of 2.15 eV, exhibited exceptional photocatalytic performance in degrading CIP. The optimal conditions for CIP removal were photocatalyst dosage of 120.9 mg, CIP concentration of 10 mg/L, and initial solution pH of 3, resulting in 93.5 % removal efficiency after 105 min of irradiation. The photocatalytic degradation kinetics of CIP followed a pseudo-first-order model with a rate constant (K) of -0.0221 L/min, indicating rapid degradation process. The photocatalyst maintained excellent performance after 5 reuses, with only a 3 % reduction in efficiency. XRD analysis confirmed the structural stability of the nanocomposite after reuse.