To describe clinical features, risk factors, and outcomes of patients with perineal and perianal rhabdomyosarcoma. The records of 51 patients (38 perineal and 13 perianal) enrolled on Children's Oncology Group clinical trials between 1997 and 2012 were reviewed. At presentation, 53% were female, 65% were older than 10years of age, 76% were alveolar histology, 76% were more than 5cm, 84% were invasive, 65% were regional node positive by imaging, 49% were metastatic, only 16% were grossly resected upfront, and 25% of patients had a delayed excision. At a median follow-up of 6.13years, estimated 5-year event-free survival (EFS) was 38% [22.17%-53.38%], and overall survival (OS) was 42% [26.66%-58.21%]. The rates of local, regional, and distant failure were 15.6%, 13.7%, 43.1%, respectively; all failures ultimately died. By univariate analysis, only age more than 10years negatively impacted 5-year EFS (p=.023) and OS (p=.09), and IRS Group also impacted OS (p=.043). In Cox proportional hazards model, neither of these variables were significant after adjusting for other factors. Patients with perineal and perianal rhabdomyosarcoma have a poor overall prognosis, probably related to poor patient and disease characteristics at presentation.