DescriptionRaising a child with autism generates a variety of issues for the family involved. It is a disorder that is particularly stressful for the family as a whole, and much research has shown elevated levels of stress in parents raising a child with autism (Dabrowska & Pisula, 2011; Lee, 2009). Past research has shown that social support (both formal and informal) has been able to reduce levels of parental stress. The purpose of the current research was to explore the relationship between parental stress and perceived social support while raising a young child with autism. The present study hypothesized that perceived social support would be negatively correlated with levels of parental stress of mothers raising a young child with autism. Participants were 25 mothers who had a child 10 years old or younger with an autism spectrum disorder. Mothers were asked to complete the Parenting Stress Index—Short Form IV (PSI-SF-IV), the Autism Behavior Checklist (ABC), the Family Support Scale (FSS), and a brief demographic questionnaire. Bivariate one-tailed correlational analyses showed medium-strength negative correlations between both the Formal and Informal Support total score on the FSS and the Total Stress Index on the PSI-SF-IV. Additionally, the Informal Support total score on the FSS was associated with decreased levels of parental stress on all three indices of the PSI-SF-IV: Parent-Child Dysfunctional Interaction, Difficult Child, and Total Stress. Results indicated that the more overall social support a mother perceives herself to receive, the lower her overall parental stress.