Differentiation of naïve peripheral B cells into terminally differentiated plasma cells is characterized by epigenetic alterations, yet the epigenetic mechanisms that control B cell fate remain unclear. Here we identified a central role for the histone H3K79 methyltransferase DOT1L in controlling B cell differentiation. Murine B cells lacking Dot1L failed to establish germinal centers (GC) and normal humoral immune responses in vivo . In vitro , activated B cells showed aberrant differentiation and prematurely acquired plasma cell features. Mechanistically, combined epigenomics and transcriptomics analysis revealed that DOT1L promotes expression of a pro-proliferative, pro-GC program. In addition, DOT1L supports the repression of an anti-proliferative, plasma cell differentiation program by maintaining expression of the H3K27 methyltransferase Ezh2 , the catalytic component of Polycomb Repressor Complex 2 (PRC2). Our findings show that DOT1L is a central modulator of the core transcriptional and epigenetic landscape in B cells, establishing an epigenetic barrier that warrants B cell naivety and GC B cell differentiation.