Neuroblastoma is a rare cancer type that mostly affects infants and young chil-dren. It can spread to other organs, including bone marrow, bone, lymph nodes, liver, and skin. The purpose herein is to present the case of a four-month-old male infant with no prior systemic disease. The patient’s father discovered the abdominal disten-sion two months before presentation at our center. Plain abdominal radiograph showed hepatomegaly; abdominal ultrasound, computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)revealed multiple solid masses of varying sizes affecting two liver lobes, which we suspected as hepatoblastoma or metastatic neuroblastoma. The patient then underwent open biopsy and pathology indicated neuroblastoma. He then received chemotherapy. Three months later, follow-up liver CT showed significant tumor resolution and urine vanillylmandelic acid (VMA)had dropped to a normal value (1.14 mg/day). The patient is presently stable. Hepatoblastoma is the most common primary liver tumor in children and is typically diagnosed within the first three years of life; nevertheless, in addition to hepatoblastoma, metastatic neuro-blastoma must also be considered in infants.