We tested compensation for vowel coarticulation on a continuum from to sh.French listeners showed compensation for both round vowels /u/ and /y/.American English listeners showed compensation for only the native phoneme /u/.The American English pattern remained unchanged even with videos of the talker.Listeners' native language affects the degree of compensation for coarticulation. This paper investigates whether compensation for coarticulation in speech perception can be mediated by native language. Substantial work has studied compensation as a consequence of aspects of general auditory processing or as a consequence of a perceptual gestural recovery processes. The role of linguistic experience in compensation for coarticulation potentially cross-cuts this controversy and may shed light on the phonetic basis of compensation. In Experiment 1, French and English native listeners identified an initial sound from a set of fricative-vowel syllables on a continuum from s to with the vowels a,u,y. French speakers are familiar with the round vowel y, while it is unfamiliar to English speakers. Both groups showed compensation (a shifted 's'/'sh' boundary compared with a) for the vowel u, but only the French-speaking listeners reliably compensated for the vowel y. In Experiment 2, 39 American English listeners judged videos in which the audio stimuli of Experiment 1 were used as soundtracks of a face saying sV, ?V, or a visual-blend of the two fricatives. The study found that videos with visual information induced significantly more ? responses than did those made from visual s tokens. However, as in Experiment 1, English-speaking listeners reliably compensated for u, but not for the unfamiliar vowel y. The listeners used visual consonant information for categorization, but did not use visual vowel information for compensation for coarticulation. The results indicate that perceptual compensation for coarticulation is a language specific effect tied to the listener's experience with the conditioning phonetic environment.