Photocatalytic water treatment has significant potential to disinfect and degrade recalcitrant organic pollutants while minimizing the need to add chemicals, but current approaches have poor energy efficiency due, in part, to inefficient utilization of photo-generated reactive oxygen species (ROS). Organic coatings such as cyclodextrin (CD) can adsorb target contaminants and bring them close to the photocatalyst surface to enhance ROS utilization efficiency, but the coatings themselves are susceptible to ROS attack. Here, we report an ROS-resistant fluorinated CD polymer (CDP) that can both adsorb contaminants and resist degradation by ROS, yielding a more efficient material for "trap and zap" water treatment. We produced the CDP through condensation polymerization of β-cyclodextrin and tetrafluoroterephthalonitrile, resulting in a cross-linked, covalently bound CD film that is much more stable than prior approaches involving physi-sorption. We optimized the coating thickness on TiO