Abstract Introduction This study reviews the practice of a high-volume surgeon, comparing laparoscopic and open surgery for inguinal hernia. In suitable patients the default was laparoscopic Totally Extra Peritoneal (TEP) approach. Materials & Methods Data from patients referred over 5 years with inguinal hernias was collated prospectively and analysed retrospectively. Short and long-term outcomes of laparoscopic and open repairs were compared. Results 205 patients underwent repair of 288 hernias (90.7% laparoscopic, 9.3% open). 83 patients underwent bilateral repair (95.2% laparoscopic). 22 patients underwent repair of 27 recurrent hernias (68% laparoscopic). 1 case (0.5%), started laparoscopically was converted to open. Complication rates were 13.4% vs 36.8% in the laparoscopic and open arms respectively (p<0.01): superficial infection (1.6% vs 0%, p=0.58); haematoma (6.3% vs 15.8%, p=0.14); seroma (4.8% vs 5.3%, p=0.94); persisting numbness (0% vs 5.3%, p<0.01) and chronic pain (1.1% vs 0%, p=0.65). No patients suffered mesh infections or explantation. Mean stay was significantly longer in open group (p=0.03), median stay was 0 nights in both groups. At median follow up 1.8 years (Interquartile-range 0.9–3.6 years) recurrence rate was 1.1% (0 female, 2 male) and 15.8% (1 female, 2 male) in the laparoscopic and open arms respectively (p<0.01). Open surgery was associated with significantly higher risk of recurrence (HR: 16.3, 95% CI: 2.7–97.8, p<0.01). Conclusions This series demonstrates the vast majority of inguinal hernias, both primary and recurrent can be treated with laparoscopic TEP repair. Higher recurrence and complication rates were associated with open repair, with a caveat of strong selection bias.