Phenolic endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) are exogenous substances that interfere with the endocrine system and disrupt normal cell functions upon entering a living organism, leading to reproductive and developmental toxicity. Therefore, the development of a rapid and efficient analytical method for detecting phenolic EDCs in environmental waters is crucial. Owing to the low concentration of phenolic EDCs in environmental water, appropriate sample pretreatment methods are necessary to remove interferences caused by the sample matrix and enrich the target analytes before instrumental analysis. Dispersive solid-phase extraction (DSPE) has gained considerable attention as a simple and rapid sample pretreatment method for environmental-sample analysis. In this method, an adsorbent material is uniformly dispersed in a sample solution and the target analytes are extracted through processes such as vortexing. Compared with traditional solid-phase extraction (SPE), DSPE increases the contact area between the adsorbent and sample solution, reduces the required amounts of adsorbent and organic solvents, and improves the extraction efficiency. The adsorbent material plays a critical role in DSPE because it determines the extraction efficiency of the method. Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are porous framework materials composed of metal clusters and multifunctional organic ligands. They possess many excellent properties such as tunable pore sizes, large surface areas, and good thermal and chemical stability, rendering them ideal adsorbent materials for sample pretreatment. MOF-derived porous carbon materials obtained through high-temperature carbonization not only increase the density of MOF materials for better separation but also retain the advantages of a large surface area, highly ordered porous structure, and high porosity. In this study, a porous carbon material derived from an MOF, named as University of Oslo-66-carbon (UiO-66-C), was synthesized using a solvothermal method and applied as an adsorbent to enrich four phenolic EDCs (bisphenol A, 4-