Estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer accounts for around 70% of all cases. Tamoxifen, an anti-estrogenic inhibitor, is the primary drug used for this type of breast cancer treatment. However, tamoxifen resistance is a major challenge in clinics. Metabolic reprogramming, an emerging hallmark of cancer, plays a key role in cancer initiation, progression, and therapy resistance. The metabolism of non-essential amino acids such as serine, proline, and glutamine is involved in tumor metabolism reprogramming. Although the association of glutamine metabolism with tamoxifen resistance has been well established, the role of proline metabolism and its critical enzyme PRODH is unknown. The aim of this study is to explore the role and mechanism of PRODH in tamoxifen resistance in breast cancer cells. PRODH and GPX4 expressions in tamoxifen-resistant cells were detected using real-time PCR and Western blot analysis. The breast cells' response to tamoxifen was measured using MTT assays. Trans-well assays were used to detect cell migration and invasion. A Xenograft tumor assay was used to detect the role of PRODH in tumor growth. Reactive oxygen species were measured using flow cytometry. PRODH expression is reduced in tamoxifen-resistant cells, and its overexpression enhances tamoxifen response in vitro and in vivo. Conversely, PRODH knockdown confers tamoxifen resistance in tamoxifen-sensitive cells. Mechanistic studies show that ferroptosis is inhibited in tamoxifen-resistant cells and overexpression of PRODH restores the ferroptosis in tamoxifen-resistant cells. Moreover, Ferrostatin-1 (Fer-1), the ferroptosis inhibitor, reversed the effect of PRODH on tamoxifen resistance. These findings suggest that PRODH regulates tamoxifen resistance by regulating ferroptosis in tamoxifen-resistant cells.