The ability for the nervous system to sense cellular stress and coordinate protein homeostasis is essential for cellular viability and organismal health. Unfortunately, stress responses which mitigate disturbances in proteostasis, such as the unfolded protein response of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER-UPR), become defunct with age. We find that expression of the constitutively active ER-UPR<font size="1"> transcription factor,
xbp-1s, in a subset of glia extends lifespan in C. elegans. Glial
xbp-1s initiates a robust cell non-autonomous activation of the ER-UPR<font size="1"> in distal cells and renders animals more resistant to chronic ER stress. Perturbing glia is sufficient to block this cell non-autonomous activation of the ER-UPR and reverses ER stress resistance and longevity. Lastly, mutants deficient in neuropeptide processing and secretion suppress glial cell non-autonomous induction of the ER-UPR and lifespan extension. These data identify cephalic sheath glial cells as central and before unknown, regulators of organismal ER stress resistance and longevity.