Based on research documenting the harmful consequences of parental conflict and divorce, this self-report study examined parental conflict, divorce, and social outcomes of Latino-American young adults. Undergraduate students (N = 431) from divorced and intact families completed measures of parental conflict, quality of parent-adult child relationships, and perceptions of social support. As hypothesized, conflict was associated with poorer parent-adult child relationships, divorce was associated with poorer father-adult child relationships and higher quality mother-adult child relationships, and quality of relationships with parents was positively related to perceived social support. Contrary to expectations, perceptions of social support were not related to parental conflict. Results are discussed in terms of features of Latino families, including extended family networks as important sources of social support.