Recent developments in social psychology have explained children's preference for members of the in-group in terms of processes of self-categorization and identification with the in-group. in contrast, this study, addressing nationality self-conceptions, examines the possibility that even before subjective identification T-vith the group has occurred; as de facto group members, children will have been exposed to a great deal of positive information about their own national group, which is likely to encourage group-serving judgments. Children who had failed to identify themselves as members of their national group were required in this study to make evaluative judgments about 5 national groups, including their own. Significant preference for the in-group emerged on 2 of 3 measures. II is concluded that subjective identification with the in-group is not a necessary precondition for in-group favoritism.