BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder (RBD) is increasingly recognized in patients with tauopathies, but its significance and underpinnings remain unclear. To address this gap, we investigated the prevalence of self-reported RBD in patients with progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) and explored its clinical and imaging correlates using METHODS: We consecutively enrolled patients meeting the 2017 Movement Disorder Society clinical criteria for PSP at a Chinese tertiary hospital between May 2019 and March 2022. Patients underwent comprehensive clinical assessments and RESULTS: We examined 148 patients recruited in the ongoing Progressive Supranuclear Palsy Neuroimage Initiative cohort. Self-reported RBD was identified in 18.2% of the participants (27/148). Patients with PSP-Richardson syndrome and PSP-parkinsonism reported the highest frequencies of self-reported RBD (21.7% and 18.5%, respectively), compared with PSP-progressive gait freezing (9.7%). While age and sex were similar in patients with and without self-reported RBD, the former group exhibited greater disease severity, as indicated by higher PSP Rating Scale (PSPrs) scores (38.0 vs 27.0, effect size = 0.256, DISCUSSION: Approximately one-fifth of patients with PSP reported RBD and exhibited more severe motor and nonmotor symptoms. The elevated