A goal for HIV prevention programs is to develop safe, effective vaccines that elicit durable and broadly protective antibodies. Many vaccine programs focus on the immune responses to critical epitopes in the gp120 portion of HIV envelope glycoprotein (Env) and seek to improve the quality and quantity of antibodies by altering the sequence, conformation, oligomerization, or glycosylation of gp120 to activate appropriate germ line B cells and mimic the subsequent maturation pathways seen in infected individuals. As a complement to these strategies, we developed dimeric fusion protein immunogens consisting of HIVBaL gp120 monomer attached to a Gly/Ser linker that is, in turn, fused to one half of the dimeric Fc domain from rhesus macaque IgG1 (Env-rFc). We envisioned that Env-rFc may mimic some aspects of immune complexes by binding Fc gamma receptors (FcγRs) on immune cells to increase the strength, breadth, and durability of Env-specific antibody responses. The Env-rFc retained a capacity to bind both cell surface CD4 and FcγRs. In a rhesus macaque immunization study, Env-rFc elicited higher gp120 binding antibody titers than Env and elicited antibodies that recognize CD4-induced epitopes. Env-rFc also induced antibodies capable of neutralizing tier 1A HIV pseudotyped viruses and mediating antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity, outcomes not observed with monomeric gp120 in our study. Serum antibodies produced in Env-rFc-immunized macaques had increased durability compared to that of Env monomer immunization. Our work suggests that adding IgG1 Fc to Env-based immunogens may stimulate increased effector capacity in the immune sera and improve the protective serum antibody response.