The goal of neonatal care is to optimise the outcome of term and preterm infants with minimal suffering. Neonates are rare patients for the anaesthetist, therefore personal and even global experiences are limited. This chapter focuses on strategies for dealing with common clinical situations, e.g. heel lancing, obtaining vascular access, circumcision, hernia repair and pyloric stenosis, as well as major neonatal surgery. With the exception of heel lancing, regional techniques are useful in all cases. However, a careful risk-benefit analysis is mandatory, especially when considering more invasive techniques such as epidural catheters.