Background: Atherosclerotic plaques form unevenly due to disturbed blood flow, causing localized endothelial cell (EC) dysfunction. Obesity exacerbates this process, but the underlying molecular mechanisms are unclear. The transcription factor EPAS1 (HIF2A) has regulatory roles in endothelium, but its involvement in atherosclerosis remains unexplored. This study investigates the potential interplay between EPAS1, obesity, and atherosclerosis. Methods: Responses to shear stress were analysed using cultured porcine aortic EC exposed to flow in vitro coupled with metabolic and molecular analyses, and by en face immunostaining of murine aortic EC exposed to disturbed flow in vivo. Obesity and dyslipidemia were induced in mice via exposure to high-fat diet or through Leptin gene deletion. The role of Epas1 in atherosclerosis was evaluated by inducible endothelial Epas1 deletion, followed by hypercholesterolemia induction (AAV-PCSK9; high-fat diet). Results: En face staining revealed EPAS1 enrichment at sites of disturbed blood flow that are prone to atherosclerosis initiation. Obese mice exhibited substantial reduction in endothelial EPAS1 expression, correlating with hyperlipidaemia. Sulforaphane, a compound with known atheroprotective effects, restored EPAS1 expression and concurrently reduced plasma triglyceride levels in obese mice. Consistently, triglyceride derivatives (free fatty acids) suppressed EPAS1 in cultured EC by upregulating the negative regulator PHD3. Clinical observations revealed that reduced plasma EPAS1 correlated with increased endothelial PHD3 in obese individuals. Functionally, endothelial EPAS1 deletion increased lesion formation in hypercholesterolemic mice, indicating an atheroprotective function. Mechanistic insights revealed that EPAS1 protects arteries by maintaining endothelial proliferation by positively regulating CD36 and LIPG expression to increase fatty acid beta-oxidation. Conclusions: Endothelial EPAS1 attenuates atherosclerosis at sites of disturbed flow by maintaining EC proliferative via fatty acid uptake and metabolism. This endothelial repair pathway is inhibited in obesity, suggesting a novel triglyceride-PHD3 modulation pathway suppressing EPAS1 expression. These findings have implications for therapeutic strategies addressing vascular dysfunction in obesity.