The circadian system regulates 24-h time-of-day patterns of cardiovascular physiology, with circadian misalignment resulting in adverse cardiovascular risk. Although many proteins in the coagulation-fibrinolysis axis show 24-h time-of-day patterns, it is not understood if these temporal patterns are regulated by circadian or behavioral (e.g., sleep and food intake) cycles, or how circadian misalignment influences these patterns. Thus, we utilized a night shiftwork protocol to analyze circadian versus behavioral cycle regulation of 238 plasma proteins linked to cardiovascular physiology. Six healthy men aged 26.2±5.6 years (mean ± SD) completed the protocol involving two baseline days with 8-h nighttime sleep opportunities (circadian alignment), a transition to shiftwork day, followed by 2days of simulated night shiftwork with 8-h daytime sleep opportunities (circadian misalignment). Plasma was collected for proteomics every 4h across 24 h during baseline and during daytime sleep and the second night shift. Cosinor analyses identified proteins with circadian or behavioral cycle-regulated 24-h time-of-day patterns. Five proteins were circadian regulated (plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, angiopoietin-2, insulin-like growth factor binding protein-4, follistatin-related protein-3, and endoplasmic reticulum resident protein-29). No cardiovascular-related proteins showed regulation by behavioral cycles. Within the coagulation pathway, circadian misalignment decreased tissue factor pathway inhibitor, increased tissue factor, and induced a 24-h time-of-day pattern in coagulation factor VII (all FDR <0.10). Such changes in protein abundance are consistent with changes observed in hypercoagulable states. Our analyses identify circadian regulation of proteins involved in cardiovascular physiology and indicate that acute circadian misalignment could promote a hypercoagulable state, possibly contributing to elevated cardiovascular disease risk among shift workers.