Stabilisation of the stalled replication fork is crucial to prevent excessive fork reversal or degradation, which can undermine genome integrity. The WRN protein is a human RecQ helicase that participates in the processing and recovery of perturbed replication forks. WRN is unique among the other human RecQ family members to possess exonuclease activity. However, the biological role of the WRN exonuclease is poorly defined, and little is known about an involvement in the response to perturbed replication. Recently, the WRN exonuclease has been linked to protection of stalled forks from MRE11-dependent degradation in response to clinically-relevant nanomolar doses of the Topoisomerase I inhibitor camptothecin. Alternative processing of perturbed forks has been associated to chemoresistance of BRCA-deficient cancer cells, thus, we used WRN exonuclease-deficiency as a model to investigate the fate of perturbed replication forks undergoing degradation, but in a BRCA wild-type condition. We find that, upon nanomolar doses of camptothecin, loss of WRN exonuclease stimulates fork inactivation and accumulation of parental gaps, which engages RAD51. Such alternative mechanism affects reinforcement of CHK1 phosphorylation and causes persistence of RAD51 during recovery from treatment. Notably, in WRN exonuclease-deficient cells, persistence of RAD51 correlates with elevated mitotic phosphorylation of MUS81 at Serine 87, which is essential to avoid accumulation of mitotic abnormalities. Altogether, these findings indicate that aberrant fork degradation, in the presence of a wild-type RAD51 axis, stimulates RAD51-mediated post-replicative repair and engagement of the MUS81 complex to limit genome instability and cell death.