Liver transplantation for infants and children has been available in South Africa for more than a decade. Current concerns have shifted from an initial target of early post- transplant survival to quality of life in the long term. Since 1985, 175 infants and children have been assessed, with 104 accepted for transplantation. Fifty have had orthotopic liver transplants (OLTx), 48 (3 retransplants) in Cape Town and 2 abroad. Biliary atresia was the most frequent diagnosis (52%) followed by acute liver failure (ALF) (16%). Waiting list mortality has remained high (15%), particularly for the ALF group (50%). Thirty-four patients survive 1 month - 14 years posttransplant. Early post OLTx mortality was low (7%) but late morbidity and mortality (23%) were mainly due to viral infection: de novo hepatitis B (5 patients. 2 deaths), EBV-related post-transplantation lymphoproliferative disease (PTLPD) (6 patients, 4 deaths) and CMV disease (9 patients, 4 deaths). Tuberculosis prophylaxis, required in 6 cases, resulted in major morbidity in 1. Hypertension requiring medication along with some compromise of renal function has been present in all but 2 patients. However, all those of school-going age (20) attend school normally and remain in good health and only 3 of the survivors have abnormal liver function tests. Successful liver transplantation is possible in a developing country with limited resources. Scarcity of virus-free donors (HBV and HIV) leading to waiting list mortality and infrequent retransplantation along with long-term consequences of immunosuppression (infection, lymphoma and renal toxicity) remain problems.