The mechanism of the inactivation of Lactobacillus casei phage PL-1 suspended in a phosphate buffer by black-light (BL) -catalytic titanium dioxide (TiO2) thin film was studied. Generation of both superoxide anions (O2) and hydroxyl radicals ( OH) was confirmed in the aqueous medium in which TiO2 film was settled with BL irradiation under gentle shaking. With BL-irradiation alone without TiO2 film, only O2 was generated to some extent. The genome DNA inside the phage particles was found to be fragmented by the treatment of PL-1 phages with BL-catalytic TiO2 film. The phage inactivation by BL-catalytic TiO2 film was inhibited by the addition of albumin in a concentration-dependent manner. BL-catalytic TiO2 film was considered to cause primarily the damage to the capsid protein through the generation of active oxygen species such as OH, followed by damage to the genome DNA inside the phage particles.