The bilateral cleft deformity with a prominent or 'locked-out' premaxilla presents one of the most challenging repairs in cleft surgery. Despite its relative frequency, traditional hard palate repair techniques fail to fully address this deformity and expose surgeons to the risk of development of a large anterior fistula when flaps cannot approximate the premaxilla. This greatly increases morbidity for the patient and creates unnecessary challenges during fistula repair or alveolar cleft bone graft later in childhood. The 270° closure technique extends the nasal closure 270° around the premaxilla, continuing the hard palate repair through the alveolar clefts. This technique has been performed on 41 patients with mean follow up of 10.8 years. The repair was successful in 93% of patients with 3 patients developing palatal fistulae, all posterior to the 270° closure. The 270° cleft palate repair around the prominent premaxilla fills a void in the literature for managing the immense challenge of this deformity. When presurgical orthopedics are not a viable option, this approach can minimize the risk of large or complex fistula formation posterior to the premaxilla.