The present investigation examined the explanatory role of anxiety sensitivity in the relation between experiential avoidance and anxious arousal, depressive, and suicidal symptoms among Latinos seeking health services at a primary healthcare facility. Participants included 138 adult Latinos (86.2 % female; Mage = 38.4, SD = 10.8 and 97.8 % used Spanish as their first language). Results indicated that experiential avoidance was indirectly related to anxious arousal, depressive, and suicidal symptoms through anxiety sensitivity. These observed effects were evident above and beyond the variance accounted for by gender, marital status, educational level, employment status, and negative affectivity. Tests of model specificity [reversing the posited explanatory variable (anxiety sensitivity) and dependent variable(s), respectively] indicated that experiential avoidance is related to anxiety sensitivity, which in turn, is associated with anxious arousal and suicidal symptoms. In regard to depressive symptoms, the relation between experiential avoidance and anxiety sensitivity appears to be reciprocal. The present findings suggest that there is indeed merit in focusing further scientific attention on the interplay between experiential avoidance and anxiety sensitivity in regard to better understanding and possibly intervening to reduce anxiety/depressive vulnerability among Latinos in primary care settings.