This study examined reunion participation among 256 urban and 265 rural African American female caregivers of older African Americans. A majority of caregivers reported having reunions and reported favorably about their function. Logistic regression results indicated that for urban caregivers, reporting young children, as compared to not reporting young children, and reporting two or more helpers with caregiving, as compared to reporting no other helpers, increased odds of reunion participation. Caring for an elderly person with a high number of chronic conditions decreased odds of reunion participation. For rural care-givers, higher levels of family functioning increased odds of reunion participation; being a spouse caregiver, as compared to a daughter caregiver, decreased odds of reunion participation. Post-hoc Wald chisquare test results confirmed significant urban-rural differences when predicting urban caregivers' reunion participation from two or more caregiver helpers and number of chronic conditions for the elder. Research and service implications are discussed.