Relative to the centromedial amygdala (CM), the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) may exhibit more sustained activation toward threat, sensitivity to unpredictability, and activation during anxious anticipation. These factors are often intertwined. For example, greater BNST (vs. CM) activation during a block of aversive stimuli may reflect either more sustained activation to the stimuli, or greater activation due to the anticipation of upcoming stimuli. To further investigate these questions, we had participants (19 females, 9 males) complete a task adapted from Somerville et al. (2013) during high-resolution 7-Tesla fMRI BOLD acquisition. We found a larger response to negative vs. neutral blocks (sustained threat) than to images (transient) in the BNST, but not the CM. However, in an additional analysis, we also found BNST, but not CM, activation to the onset of the anticipation period on negative vs. neutral trials, possibly contributing to BNST activation across negative blocks. Predictability did not affect CM or BNST activation. These results suggest a BNST role in anxious anticipation and highlight the need for further research clarifying the temporal response characteristics of these regions.