This research aimed to determine the relationship between Parenting Styles and Empathy in Person between the 19 and 29 years of the Meta. To this end, quantitative research was developed, with descriptive design and a correlational method. The participants were 260 people; The instruments used were the cognitive and affective empathy test and the parental style scale and perceived parental inconsistency. For the analysis of the results, the statistic Spss 25 was used. It was evidenced that the relationship between the dimensions of parenting styles (demand and response) of both parents and the subscales of empathy (adoption of perspective, emotional understanding, empathic stress and joy empathic), were statistically significant, but low. With regard to parenting styles, it was found that the sons perception of paternal and maternal parenting was “authoritarian”. In relation to gender, it was evidenced that both parents are more authoritarian with male sons than with females. In the subscales of empathy, the vast majority of the population was found at a low-medium level.