Infants attend to their caregivers and other social partners to gather information for learning. Research shows that infants demonstrate preferential looking, or attention-holding, to a caregiver’s face compared to a stranger’s face (Barrera & Mauer, 1981). However, it is unknown whether infants show similar biases in attention orienting, or initial selection, to caregivers. In the present study we recorded eye movements from 23 (anticipated N=50) 6- and 9-month-old infants as they viewed caregiver and stranger faces appearing in six-item search arrays. During single target trials, search arrays contained a one target face (either caregiver or stranger) and five non-social distractor objects. Dual target trials were identical except caregiver and stranger faces appeared simultaneously. We measured frequency of initial orienting (i.e., first look) as well as frequency and speed of overall orienting to target faces. Preliminary data indicates similar overall orienting to caregiver and stranger faces on single-target trials. However, infants showed biased attention orienting towards the caregiver on dual-target trials, when multiple faces compete for selective attention resources.