This study focuses on the solution antimicrobial effectiveness of a novel class of copolyoxetanes with quaternary ammonium and PEG-like side chains. A precursor P[(BBOx-m)(ME2Ox)] copolyoxetane was prepared by cationic ring-opening copolymerization of 3-((4-bromobutoxy)methyl)-3-methyloxetane (BBOx) and 3-((2-(2-methoxyethoxy)ethoxy)methyl)-3-methyloxetane (ME2Ox) to give random copolymers with 14-100 (m) mol % BBOx. Reaction of P[(BBOx-m)(ME2Ox)] with dodecyl dimethylamine gave the corresponding quaternary P[(C12-m)(ME2Ox)] polycation salts, designated C12-m, as viscous liquids in 100% yield. BBOx/ME2Ox and C12/ME2Ox ratios were obtained by (1)H NMR spectroscopy. C12-m molecular weights (M(n), 3.5-21.9 kDa) were obtained from (1)H NMR end group analysis. DSC studies up to 150 °C showed only thermal transitions between -69 and -34 °C assigned to T(g) values. Antibacterial activity for the C12-m copolyoxetanes was tested by determining minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) against Gram(+) Staphylococcus aureus and Gram(-) Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa . MIC decreased with increasing C12 mol percent, reaching a minimum in the range C12-43 to C12-60. Overall, the antimicrobial with consistently low MICs for the three tested pathogenic bacteria was C12-43: (bacteria, MIC, μg/mL) E. coli (6), S. aureus (5), and P. aeruginosa (33). For C12-43, minimum biocidal concentration (MBC) to reach 99.99% kill in 24 h required 1.5× MIC for S. aureus and 2× MIC for E. coli and P. aeruginosa . At 5× MIC against a challenge of 10(8) cfu/mL, C12-43 kills ≥99% S. aureus , E. coli , and P. aeruginosa within 1 h. C12-m copolyoxetane cytotoxicity toward human red blood cells was low, indicating good prospects for biocompatibility. The tunability of C12-m copolyoxetane compositions, effective antimicrobial behavior against Gram(+) and Gram(-) bacteria, and promising biocompatibility offer opportunities for further modification and potential applications as therapeutic agents.