This study examines 36 years of national pediatric heart transplantation data to 1) identify trends in transplant volume, centers, and one-year graft survival, and 2) assess how center transplant volume impacts outcomes over a contemporary 11-year period. We performed a retrospective review of pediatric patients (<18 years) undergoing heart transplantation from 1/1/1987 to 12/31/2022 using the United Network for Organ Sharing Database. Trend analyses included the whole cohort, while volume-outcome analyses included a contemporary cohort to account for the temporal changes observed in transplant survival. Highest volume centers were defined by the number of heart transplants performed per center per year. Over 36 years, 11,828 pediatric heart transplants were performed. Transplant volume steadily rose, the number of centers remained stable, and one-year graft survival has improved significantly. In the contemporary era (2012-2022), 89 centers conducted 4,959 pediatric heart transplants. The top 15% high-volume centers (13 centers) accounted for 48.3% (2,393) of transplants, with an average of 16.7±3.8 transplants per center annually, compared to 3.9±3.1 for lower volume centers. Despite transplanting higher risk patients, high-volume centers had similar postoperative outcomes and improved long-term survival. While the number of US pediatric heart transplant centers has remained stable, pediatric heart transplant volume is steadily increasing, as is one-year graft survival. In a contemporary cohort, the top 15th percentile highest volume centers accounted for 48.3% of US pediatric heart transplants and transplanted higher risk patients with similar postoperative outcomes and improved longitudinal survival.