Extracranial carotid artery aneurysms (ECCAs) and pseudoaneurysms are relatively rare. The “gold standard” treatment has historically been open repair; however, there is increasing evidence of successful treatment of ECCAs with endovascular techniques. Our study examined the evolving experience with endovascular management of ECCAs at a tertiary care center. We performed a retrospective analysis of patients with ECCAs who underwent endovascular interventions at a single institution from 2010 to 2019. With increasing experience, the techniques evolved from covered stents to stent-assisted coil embolization and finally to braided stents and overlapping closed-cell stents. There were 16 ECCAs treated with endovascular modalities. The average age was 65.6 years. There were nine (60.0%) men. Six (37.5%) aneurysms were symptomatic; three patients had painless pulsatile masses, and three patients had painful pulsatile masses. There were nine (56.3%) spontaneous ECCAs, six (37.5%) ECCAs after prior carotid procedures, and one (6.2%) traumatic ECCA. Two (12.5%) were treated with covered stents, two (12.5%) were treated with stent-assisted embolization, two (12.5%) were treated with flow-diverting braided stents, eight (50%) were treated with overlapping bare-metal stents, and two (12.5%) were treated with embolization or ligation alone. Technical success was achieved in all patients. The mean duration of follow-up was 357 days (range, 8-3039 days). No perioperative or postoperative complications were encountered, including no neurologic deficits and no embolic events. All patients were discharged on postoperative day 1 or 2. All 14 (100%) stents retained vessel patency on follow-up imaging, and exclusion of ECCAs was confirmed on postprocedure surveillance imaging. Endovascular modalities for the management of ECCAs have evolved with experience. Our study suggests that endovascular management is technically feasible as well as clinically effective and suggests an algorithm for navigating the various treatment modalities.