Introduction The extent of liver resection for gall bladder cancer (GBC) is still debated .We evaluated the post-operative and oncological outcomes in patients who underwent liver wedge excision Material and Methods Patients who underwent radical cholecystectomy (with a liver wedge excision of 2.5-3 centimetres) from January 2010 to December 2015 were retrospectively analysed. Patients of incidental GBC requiring revision surgery and those who received neoadjuvant therapy were excluded. Results 97 out of 558 cases of primary GBC were selected for the study. Majority of our patients were of stage III disease (52 %). At a median follow up of 29 months, 64% of patients were disease free where as 14% were alive with disease. 2.5 % died in postoperative period, 12% patients died of disease and 6 % died of unrelated causes.13 patients had loco regional recurrence and 10 failed at distant sites. Only one patient recurred in the gall bladder bed. 3-year overall survival of stage II was 85 % and of stage III was 60 %. Conclusion Surgical outcomes of GBC at our centre, where we perform radical cholecystectomy with wedge resection of the liver, parallels published world literature. With low morbidity and mortality, it emphasis oncological equivalence of liver wedge resection as compared to formal segment IVb/V excision, provided margin negative resection is achieved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]