Adsorption isotherms for sodium 10-undecen-1-yl sulfate (1) on alumina at ca. pH = 4.0, with and without styrene present, show behavior typical of anionic surfactants. Adsorption of 1 is greater in the presence of styrene. Thermal homopolymerization of 1 and copolymerization of 1 with styrene was carried out using ammonium persulfate as an initiator in conventional micellar media and on alumina as surface admicelles. Homopolymerization of 1 proceeded for micellar systems only above the critical micelle concentration (cmc) to give polysurfactant 2 in variable yield. Homopolymerization of 1 can occur at concentrations below the cmc of 1 using admicellar polymerization to give polysurfactant 2 in low yield. Copolymer from the micellar system (3) consists of mostly styrene repeat units (> 99:1 styrene/surfactant, M(W) = 312 000; polydispersity = 4.8), while copolymers obtained from the admicellar system by extraction with chloroform (4, 3:1 styrene/surfactant, M(W) = 1 170 000; polydispersity = 2.1) and dimethylformamide (5, 20:1 styrene/surfactant, M(W) = 86 000; polydispersity = 4.0) were relatively rich in surfactant repeat units. It is postulated that the higher degree of incorporation of surfactant into copolymer from the admicellar system arises from the fixed, ordered structure of admicelles relative to micellar structures, where normal emulsion polymerization appears to occur.