Metastatic cancer involving spread to the peritoneal cavity is referred to as peritoneal carcinomatosis and has a very poor prognosis. Our previous studies demonstrated a toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) and C-type lectin receptor (CLR; Mincle/MCL) agonist pairing of monophosphoryl lipid A (MPL) and trehalose-6,6'-dicorynomycolate (TDCM) effectively inhibits peritoneal tumor growth and ascites development through a mechanism dependent upon B1a cell-produced natural IgM, complement, and phagocytes. In the current study, we investigated the requirement for TLR4 and Fc receptor common γ chain (FcRγ), required for Mincle/MCL signaling, in the MPL/TDCM-elicited response. MPL/TDCM significantly increased macrophages and Ly6Chi monocytes in the peritoneal cavity of both TLR4-/- and FcRγ-/- mice, suggesting redundancy in the signals required for monocyte/macrophage recruitment. However, B1 cell activation, antibody secreting cell differentiation, and tumor-reactive IgM production were defective in TLR4-/-, but not FcRγ-/- mice. TRIF was required for production of IgM reactive against tumor- and mucin-related antigens, but not phosphorylcholine, whereas TLR4 was required for production of both types of reactivities. Consistent with this, B1 cells lacking TLR4 or TRIF did not proliferate or differentiate into tumor-reactive IgM-producing cells in vitro and did not reconstitute MPL/TDCM-dependent protection against peritoneal carcinomatosis in CD19-/- mice. Our results indicate a TLR4/TRIF-dependent pathway is required by B1 cells for MPL/TDCM-elicited production of protective tumor-reactive natural IgM. The dependency on TRIF signaling for tumor-reactive, but not phosphorylcholine-reactive, IgM production reveals unexpected heterogeneity in TLR4-dependent regulation of natural IgM production, thereby highlighting important differences to consider when designing vaccinesortherapies targeting these specificities.