Pain disproportionally affects minoritized individuals, such as Latinx/Hispanic. Evidence suggests that resilience factors are associated with positive pain-related outcomes; however, there is a lack of research to understand the role of cultural factors, resilience, and pain in the Latinx/Hispanic community, an understudied population substantially affected by Musculoskeletal pain (MSK). The purpose of this pilot study was to investigate how acculturation and ethnic identity are associated with sources of resilience (pain resilience, hope) and pain outcomes (pain intensity, pain interference) in a sample of older Latinx adults. A total of 21 participants self-identified as Hispanic attended a laboratory visit and completed sociocultural questionnaires including the Psychological Acculturation Scale (PAS), the Multi-Group Ethnic Identity Measure (MEIM), Perceived Ethnic Discrimination Questionnaire (PEDQ), as well as the Pain Resilience Scale (PRS), Adult Dispositional Hope Scale (ADHS), and the PROMIS-pain intensity and PROMIS-pain interference scales. There were 14 males, and the average age was 60.8 years (SD=8.6). Most participants were foreign-born (n=14) and reported living in the U.S for an average of 38.4 years (SD=20.3). Consistent with prior research, correlation analyses revealed that pain resilience was negatively associated with pain interference (r=-0.47). There were no significant correlations between acculturation variables and pain outcomes; however, having a stronger ethnic identity was positively associated with pain resilience (r=0.57) and hope (r=0.53). Also, the degree of acculturation was negatively associated with discrimination (r=-0.52). These results shed light on the need to incorporate cultural factors such as ethnic identity into research examining pain-related outcomes and resiliency. Doing so will take us one step closer towards identifying ways to leverage cultural variables into interventions designed to enhance resilience in older Latinx/Hispanic adults who deal with MSK. Grant support from NIH/NIA (P30AG059297-03). Pain disproportionally affects minoritized individuals, such as Latinx/Hispanic. Evidence suggests that resilience factors are associated with positive pain-related outcomes; however, there is a lack of research to understand the role of cultural factors, resilience, and pain in the Latinx/Hispanic community, an understudied population substantially affected by Musculoskeletal pain (MSK). The purpose of this pilot study was to investigate how acculturation and ethnic identity are associated with sources of resilience (pain resilience, hope) and pain outcomes (pain intensity, pain interference) in a sample of older Latinx adults. A total of 21 participants self-identified as Hispanic attended a laboratory visit and completed sociocultural questionnaires including the Psychological Acculturation Scale (PAS), the Multi-Group Ethnic Identity Measure (MEIM), Perceived Ethnic Discrimination Questionnaire (PEDQ), as well as the Pain Resilience Scale (PRS), Adult Dispositional Hope Scale (ADHS), and the PROMIS-pain intensity and PROMIS-pain interference scales. There were 14 males, and the average age was 60.8 years (SD=8.6). Most participants were foreign-born (n=14) and reported living in the U.S for an average of 38.4 years (SD=20.3). Consistent with prior research, correlation analyses revealed that pain resilience was negatively associated with pain interference (r=-0.47). There were no significant correlations between acculturation variables and pain outcomes; however, having a stronger ethnic identity was positively associated with pain resilience (r=0.57) and hope (r=0.53). Also, the degree of acculturation was negatively associated with discrimination (r=-0.52). These results shed light on the need to incorporate cultural factors such as ethnic identity into research examining pain-related outcomes and resiliency. Doing so will take us one step closer towards identifying ways to leverage cultural variables into interventions designed to enhance resilience in older Latinx/Hispanic adults who deal with MSK. Grant support from NIH/NIA (P30AG059297-03).