This study aimed to develop and characterize acorn shell-based activated carbon (AC) as a low-cost, abundantly available, highly efficient, and eco-friendly adsorbent. AC was modified ultrasonically using zinc hydroxide, Zn(OH)2, and used effectively for the removal of methy-lene blue (MB) from aqueous solutions. MB is one of the most commonly used dyestuffs in the textile industry. The resulting products were characterized via analytical methods such as scan-ning electron microscopy, scanning electron microscopy/energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (SEM, SEM/EDS, XRD, and FTIR, respectively). The influence of different batch parameters, such as initial pH (3-10), adsorbent dos-age (0.1-0.3 g/100 mL), temperature (298-318 K), initial dyestuff concentration (25-150 mg L-1), and contact time (0-180 min), on the adsorption process, was examined. The highest maxi-mum adsorption capacity was found to be 117.65 mg g-1 at 318 K from the Langmuir isotherm model for AC/Zn(OH)2. The pseudo-second-order model determined the kinetics of MB dyestuff adsorption (R2 > 0.99). According to the results of the thermodynamic parameters, standard neg-ative values of Gibbs free energy, standard enthalpy, and standard entropy values were positive. These results revealed the endothermic nature of the adsorption process. After considering all the results, it was concluded that AC/Zn(OH)2 adsorbent shows promise due to its manufactur-ability from a cheap source, high adsorption capacity, and short production time in addition to possessing eco-friendly characteristics, for removing MB dyestuff from aqueous solutions.