Twenty-six patients with petroclival lesions were operated on via a petrosal approach designed to preserve hearing. The surgical pathology included 14 meningiomas, three chordomas, three epidermoid cysts, four vertebrobasilar aneurysms, and two pontine cavernous malformations. The approach allowed complete resection of 14 of 20 tumors and definitive treatment of all six vascular lesions. Complications included cerebrospinal fluid leakage in three patients, high-frequency sensorineural hearing loss in three, meningitis in one, and cranial nerve palsies (which were usually transient). This approach allows a wide exposure of the petroclival region with decreased operating distance. Cerebellar and temporal lobe retraction are minimized, dural sinus patency is maintained, and the inner ear structures are not sacrificed. The approach is suitable for neoplastic or vascular lesions involving the petroclival region, the ventral pons, or the basilar artery trunk. The surgical technique, indications, and neuro-otological considerations are discussed.