For antibiotic contaminants, biomass have been regarded as one of the most resource of functional carbonaceous materials due to its biocompatibility, biodegradability, and good adsorption/degradation performance. Herein, a self-supporting CoFe2O4 nanoparticles on 2D g-C3N4/2D loofah activated carbon (CoFe2O4/g-C3N4/BC) is successfully synthesized by simple hydrothermal method using loofah as carbon source and melamine as nitrogen source. The obtained CoFe2O4/g-C3N4/BC materials have a stable hierarchical sandwich structure with macroporous and mesoporous and a large surface area (189.52 m2/g), which can be used as an adsorbent/catalyst for the adsorption/degradation of organic pollutants. With these beneficial properties, the CoFe2O4/g-C3N4/BC material mediated peroxymonosulfate activation exhibits superior catalytic activity in the degradation of organic pollutants under ambient conditions. A model pollutant tetracycline (TC) can be rapidly degraded by 94.97 % within 25 min. The degradation efficiency was sustained at 88.21 % even after five operational cycles, with the cobalt metal leaching rate consistently below 50 μg/L. The inhibition experiment indicates that the main active species in the CoFe2O4/g-C3N4/BC + PMS system are SO4•−, HO• and 1O2, and the degradation of TC is achieved by the synergistic effect of free radical and non-radical pathways. This study provides a new perspective on the treatment of antibiotic wastewater via the sulfate radicals based-advanced oxidation processes (SR-AOPs).