Thoracic epidural analgesia provides effective pain control after lung transplantation; however, the optimal timing of placement is controversial. We sought to compare pain control and pulmonary and epidural morbidity between patients receiving preoperative vs postoperative epidurals. Institutional records were reviewed for patients undergoing a bilateral lung transplant via a bilateral anterior thoracotomy with transverse sternotomy incision between January 2014 and January 2017. Pain control was measured using visual analog scale pain scores (0-10). Pulmonary complications included a composite of pneumonia, prolonged intubation, and reintubation/tracheostomy. Among 103 patients, 72 (70%) had an epidural placed preoperatively and 31 (30%) had an epidural placed within 72hours posttransplant. There were no differences in the rates of cardiopulmonary bypass (3% vs 0%, P=0.59); however, patients with a preoperative epidural were less likely to be placed on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation intraoperatively (25% vs 52%, P=0.01). Pain control was similar at 24hours (1.2 vs 1.7, P=0.05); however, patients with a preoperative epidural reported lower pain scores at 48 (1.2 vs 2.1, P=0.02) and 72hours posttransplant (0.8 vs 1.7, P=0.02). There were no differences in primary graft dysfunction (42% vs 56%, P=0.28), length of mechanical ventilation (19.5 vs 24hours, P=0.18), or adverse pulmonary events (33% vs 52%, P=0.12). No adverse events including epidural hematoma, paralysis, or infection resulted from epidural placement. Preoperative thoracic epidural placement provides improved analgesia without increased morbidity following lung transplantation.