Historically, epilepsy surgery has been considered a treatment of last resort. Advances in neuroimaging, particularly high resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques and functional neuroimaging, advances in neuroanesthesia and neurosurgery have all contributed to the development of safe and effective epilepsy surgery in infants and children. Furthermore, epilepsy surgery may prevent the chronic deleterious effects that uncontrolled epileptic seizures have on brain development. The main challenges that clinicians face are early identification of infants and children who have epilepsy which is amenable to epilepsy surgery, the timing of epilepsy surgery and the investigation of patients where no lesion is demonstrable on MRI. It is imperative that children be followed after epilepsy surgery to assess the long-term outcomes not only in relation to seizure control, but also to assess quality of life, psychoeducational achievement, and psychiatric co-morbidity.