Liver cancer is a leading cause of cancer-related deaths; however, primary treatment options such as surgical resection and liver transplant may not be viable for many patients. Minimally invasive image-guided microwave ablation (MWA) provides a locally effective treatment option for these patients with an impact comparable to that of surgery for both cancer-specific and overall survival. MWA efficacy is correlated with accurate image guidance; however, conventional modalities such as B-mode ultrasound and computed tomography have limitations. Alternatively, ultrasound elastography has been used to demarcate post-ablation zones, yet has limitations for pre-ablation visualization because of variability in strain contrast between cancer types. This study attempted to characterize both pre-ablation tumors and post-ablation zones using electrode displacement elastography (EDE) for 13 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma or liver metastasis. Typically, MWA ablation margins of 0.5–1.0 cm are desired, which are strongly correlated with treatment efficacy. Our results revealed an average estimated ablation margin inner quartile range of 0.54–1.21 cm with a median value of 0.84 cm. These treatment margins lie within or above the targeted ablative margin, indicating the potential to use EDE for differentiating index tumors and ablated zones during clinical ablations. We also obtained a high correlation between corresponding segmented cross-sectional areas from contrast-enhanced computed tomography, the current clinical gold standard, when compared with EDE strain images, with r2 values of 0.97 and 0.98 for pre- and post-ablation regions.