Joint-preserving reconstructive surgeries in children and adolescents remain challenging for orthopaedists with regard to indication and surgical technique. Besides skeletal maturity and tissue quality at the time of surgery, the kind and degree of deformity, the causative pathologies in secondary dysplasias, and the prognosis have to be considered when deciding for or against a surgical procedure. Developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) is the most frequent deformity that indicates reorienting surgery on the hip joint in children and adolescents. The aim of these procedures is to prevent early secondary osteoarthritis. For patients and families as well as for the orthopaedist, risk-benefit analysis is of major interest. In this study, the surgical techniques and specialties of different reconstructive operations are presented. Based on a review of the literature, the results of defined surgical methods are discussed and compared with own experiences. Only limited information is available about the clinical long-term outcome after defined reconstructing surgery on the hip joint in children and adolescents. The degree of the deformity, the age of onset, and the surgical experience of the orthopaedist are crucial factors in decision making for or against a surgical treatment. In early childhood, acetabuloplasty and Salter osteotomy are widely accepted to correct DDH. Triple and periacetabular osteotomies are preferred and have shown promising results in late adolescence and young adults. When the triradiate cartilage (growth plate) is closed, good outcomes can be achieved by the Ganz osteotomy. Intertrochanteric varus and derotation osteotomies of the femur may serve as additional procedures for pelvic osteotomies and are rarely indicated as a single procedure today. Reconstructive surgery on the hip joint improves function and may prevent early osteoarthritis and delay progression of cartilage degeneration in most patients when the indication and surgical technique are appropriate.