Angiogenic blood vessel growth requires several distinct but integrated cellular activities. Endothelial cell sprouting and proliferation lead to the expansion of the vasculature and give rise to a highly branched, immature plexus, which is subsequently reorganized into a mature and stable network. Although it is known that integrin-mediated cell-matrix interactions are indispensable for embryonic angiogenesis, little is known about the function of integrins in different steps of vascular morphogenesis. Here, by investigating the integrin b1-subunit with inducible and endothelial-specific gene targeting in the postnatal mouse retina, we show that b1 integrin promotes endothelial sprouting but is a negative regulator of proliferation. In maturing vessels, integrin b1 is indispensable for proper localization of VE-cadherin and thereby cell-cell junction integrity. The sum of our findings establishes that integrin b1 has critical functions in the growing and maturing vasculature, and is required for the formation of stable, non-leaky blood vessels.