Halting breast cancer metastatic relapse following primary tumor removal remains challenging due to a lack of specific vulnerabilities to target during the clinical dormancy phase. To identify such vulnerabilities, we conducted genome-wide CRISPR screens on two breast cancer cell lines with distinct dormancy properties: 4T1 (short-term dormancy) and 4T07 (prolonged dormancy). The dormancy-prone 4T07 cells displayed a unique dependency on class III PI3K (PIK3C3). Unexpectedly, 4T07 cells exhibited higher mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) activity than 4T1 cells due to lysosome-dependent signaling occurring at the cell periphery. Pharmacologic inhibition of PIK3C3 suppressed this phenotype in the 4T1-4T07 models as well as in human breast cancer cell lines and a breast cancer patient-derived xenograft. Furthermore, inhibiting PIK3C3 selectively reduced metastasis burden in the 4T07 model and eliminated dormant cells in a HER2-dependent murine breast cancer dormancy model. These findings suggest that PIK3C3-peripheral lysosomal signaling to mTORC1 may represent a targetable axis for preventing dormant cancer cell-initiated metastasis in patients with breast cancer. Significance: Dormancy-prone breast cancer cells depend on the class III PI3K to mediate peripheral lysosomal positioning and mTORC1 hyperactivity, which can be targeted to blunt breast cancer metastasis.