Hydrolysis of common membrane phospholipids occurs in response to various environmental stresses, but the control and cellular function of this hydrolysis are not fully understood. Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) is a pivotal signaling molecule involved in various stress responses. Here, we show that the plasma membrane-bound phospholipase D, PLDdelta, is activated in response to H2O2 and that the resulting phosphatidic acid (PA) functions to decrease H2O2-promoted programmed cell death. The Arabidopsis genome has 12 PLD genes, and knockout of PLDdelta abolishes specifically the oleate-stimulated PLD activity. H2O2 treatment of Arabidopsis cells activates PLD enzyme activity, and ablation of PLDdelta abolishes that activation. PLDdelta-null cells display increased sensitivity to H2O2-induced cell death. The addition of PA to PLDdelta-null cells mitigates the H2O2 effect, whereas suppression of the H2O2-induced PA formation in wild-type cells increases the effect. PLDdelta-ablated plants exhibit increased susceptibility to stress. These results demonstrate that activation of oleate-stimulated PLDdelta constitutes an important step in the plant response to H2O2 and increasing plant stress tolerance.