Ferroptosis is widely involved in degenerative diseases in various tissues including kidney, liver and brain, and is a targetable vulnerability in clear-cell carcinomas and therapy-resistant cancers. Accumulation of phospholipid hydroperoxides in cellular membranes is recognized as the hallmark and rate-limiting step of ferroptosis; however, the enzymes contributing to lipid peroxidation remain poorly characterized. Using genome-wide, CRISPR/Cas9-mediated suppressor screens, we identify cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase (POR) as a contributor to ferroptotic cell death in cancer cells exhibiting inherent and induced susceptibility to ferroptosis. By genetic depletion of POR in cancer cells, we reveal that POR contributes to ferroptosis across a wide range of lineages and cell-states, and in response to distinct mechanisms of ferroptosis induction. Using systematic lipidomic profiling, we further map POR's activity to the lipid peroxidation step in ferroptosis. Hence, our work suggests POR as a key mediator of ferroptosis and a potential druggable target for developing anti-ferroptosis therapeutics.