Alcohol craving is related to problematic alcohol use; therefore, pharmacotherapies that modulate alcohol craving are of interest. N-acetylcysteine, an over-the-counter antioxidant, is a candidate pharmacotherapy for adolescent alcohol use with the potential to impact craving. Cue-reactivity paradigms using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) can identify neural regions implicated in craving and serve as a screening tool for novel pharmacotherapy options. This preliminary study examined the effect of N-acetylcysteine on neural reactivity to alcohol cues and subjective craving among 31 non-treatment-seeking adolescents (17.6-19.9 years old, 55% female) who use alcohol heavily. In a randomized cross-over design, participants completed three fMRI sessions: baseline and after a 10-day course of N-acetylcysteine (1200 mg twice daily) and matched placebo. The primary outcome was neural response to alcohol versus non-alcohol beverage cues after N-acetylcysteine versus placebo, with a secondary outcome of self-reported subjective craving. In the full sample (n = 31), there was no effect of N-acetylcysteine versus placebo on neural alcohol reactivity (ps ≥ 0.49; s = 0.00-0.07) or self-reported acute alcohol craving (p = 0.18, = 0.06). However, N-acetylcysteine did reduce self-reported generalized alcohol craving (p = 0.03, = 0.15). In a subsample of youth who met criteria for past-year alcohol use disorder (n = 19), results remained unchanged. N-acetylcysteine may not alter neural reactivity to alcohol cues or acute craving; however, it may reduce general subjective alcohol craving among adolescents who consume alcohol heavily.