Severe burns on the forehead are rare; well-conducted initial surgical treatment also limits the occurrence of sequelae. Therefore, indications for repairing the forehead arise from complex burns often extending to adjacent units. Repair techniques depend on the location and size of the lesions, associated nearby damage, and the patient's ability to withstand the burden of treatment. Management at the acute stage determines the sequelae; excision-grafting is the standard treatment, but it yields good results only if the fundamental principles of repair are respected: intervention within the 10th and 15th days post-burn, graft harvesting from the cephalic extremity or the upper part of the thorax and arms, and respect for the frontal unit. Sequelae management follows the same imperatives and typically requires skin expansion: front expansion for skin flaps if enough frontal skin is still available, upper thorax expansion for full thickness skin grafts if the frontal scar is too extensive. However, the excellent results obtained should not conceal the significant constraints associated with skin expansion.