Atherosclerosis involves inflammatory and thrombotic mechanisms, to which both platelets and transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) contribute. The effect of platelet-derived TGFβ on atherosclerosis is, however, unknown and therefore investigated. Murine platelet-selective TGFβ-deficiency (plt-TGFβ-/-) was created by a Pf4-Cre approach, and an atherosclerotic mouse model was established by functional abrogation of Ldlr and 10-15 weeks of a high-fat diet in plt-TGFβ-/- mice and their non-plt-TGFβ-/- littermates. En face Oil Red O staining of the aorta showed more atherosclerotic lesion formation in plt-TGFβ-/- mice, with significant increases in both lesion size and lesion coverage of the total aortic area. Cryosections of the aortic root confirmed the aggravation of atherogenesis. Platelet-derived TGFβ deficiency increased circulating platelets and plasma levels of total cholesterol, LDL-cholesterol, and triglycerides after a 10 or 15 week high-fat diet period. RNA sequencing and proteomic analyses of the aorta showed signs of CD4+ T effector cell and macrophage activation in plt-TGFβ-/- mice. In conclusion, platelet-specific TGFβ deficiency aggravates atherosclerosis, via increasing arterial inflammation and plasma levels of cholesterol. Our findings demonstrate that platelet-derived TGFβ is prominently athero-protective.