LncRNA TUG1 plays pivotal roles in various diseases. However, its exact roles in benzene - induced hematotoxicity remain unclear. Herein, we aimed to investigate the role and mechanism of TUG1 in hematoxic injuries caused by benzene. In the current study, TUG1 was found dramatically decreased in WBCs of benzene exposure workers and negatively correlated with benzene exposure duration and urine SPMA. In vitro assays demonstrated that TUG1 overexpression attenuated 1,4-BQ-caused suppression of cell viability and proliferation, and promotion of ROS generation and apoptosis via PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway. Bioinformatic prediction and molecular assay validated miR-34a-5p was negatively regulated by TUG1. The miR-34a-5p was upregulated in 1,4-BQ treated cells and downregulated in TUG1 overexpression cells. Moreover, miR-34a-5p upregulation partially reversed the protective effects of TUG1 overexpression on 1,4-BQ - caused cytotoxicity. Furthermore, SIRT6 was a downstream target gene of miR-34a-5p, whose expression was reduced in miR-34a-5p upregulation cells and elevated in TUG1 overexpression cells. Upregulated SIRT6 could counteract accelerated cytotoxicity mediated by miR-34a-5p upregulation after 1,4-BQ treatment. Taken together, our study revealed that the critical role of the TUG1/miR-34a-5p/SIRT6 axis in benzene-caused hematotoxicity, and provided scientific basis for further understanding the epigenetic regulatory mechanisms underlying benzene hematotoxicity.