Background: Intra-arterial chemotherapy (IAC) is increasingly used in managing patients with retinoblastoma. In Australia, IAC is primarily used as a globe-salvage treatment when primary treatment has failed. Methods: A retrospective, single-institution study conducted on consecutive children treated with IAC at the Royal Children’s Hospital, Victoria, Australia between September 2009 to January 2021. Results: Using the Intraocular Classification of Retinoblastoma (ICRB), 16 eyes of 14 children classified as group A (n=1), Group B (n=3), Group D (n=10), or Group E (n=2) were treated with IAC. All but one child received IAC as secondary treatment for relapsed or refractory disease. Successful catheterisation of the ophthalmic artery was achieved in 37/46 (80.4%) procedures. A systemic complication occurred in one child (n=1): radiological evidence of a watershed infarct. Local complications of IAC included conjunctival injection (n=1), forehead rash (n=1), sixth cranial nerve palsy (n=2), ptosis (n=2), hemi-retinal ischaemia (n=1), choroidal ischaemia (n=1), retinal detachment (n=2), and choroidal neovascularisation (n=1). Regional extra-ocular disease occurred in one child. No child had distant metastatic disease and no child died. The overall globe salvage rate was 8/16 (50%): Group A (n=1, 100%), group B (n=2, 66.6%), Group D (n=5, 50%), group E (n=0, 0%). Kaplan Meier analysis of ocular survival following treatment with IAC was 75%, 68% and 53% for 6 months, 1 year and 2 years, respectively. Conclusions: Our experience demonstrates that IAC can be a useful treatment modality for refractory retinoblastoma in globe salvage, with an acceptable side-effect profile.