Background Severe tricuspid regurgitation (TR) is associated with significant morbidity, reduced exercise capacity and impaired quality of life, while many patients are at prohibitive surgical risk. Transcatheter tricuspid edge-to-edge repair (T-TEER) using TriClip™, MitraClip™ or PASCAL™ has emerged as a less invasive alternative, but pooled evidence on reverse remodeling, functional status and quality-of-life (QoL) outcomes remains limited. Objectives To perform a systematic review and meta-analysis of studies reporting pre- and post-T-TEER outcomes in patients with at least severe TR, focusing on clinical, functional and echocardiographic outcomes. Methods MEDLINE/PubMed, Embase, Scopus and Google Scholar were searched from inception to May 2025 following PRISMA/Cochrane methodology. Studies reporting paired pre- and post-T-TEER data were included. Data extraction and quality assessment were independently performed, and pooled analyses of echocardiographic, clinical and QoL outcomes were conducted. Results Thirty studies (n = 7,563 patients) met inclusion criteria. Pooled analyses demonstrated a significant reduction in severe or greater TR following T-TEER (RR = 0.39; 95% CI 0.30 to 0.51), with a decrease in effective regurgitant orifice area (EROA; MD = −0.37 cm²; 95% CI −0.42 to −0.31). Right ventricular size decreased: basal RVEDD MD = −3.44 mm (95% CI −4.68 to −2.20) and mid RVEDD MD = −4.40 mm (95% CI −7.92 to −0.88). Markers of venous congestion improved with a smaller IVC diameter (MD = −2.28 mm; 95% CI −4.50 to −0.05). There was a small deterioration in RV contractile indices (RV-FAC MD = −2.02%; 95% CI −3.68 to −0.36; TAPSE MD = – 0.57 mm; 95% CI – 1.12 to – 0.02) and a modest, non-statistically significant change in LVEF (MD = −1.73%; 95% CI −4.94 to 1.47). Clinically meaningful benefits were evident, with fewer patients in NYHA class III–IV (RR = 0.44; 95% CI 0.38–0.51), 6MWD increased (MD = +42.4 m; 95% CI 28.2–56.6), and KCCQ score improved (MD = +15.3 points; 95% CI 12.9–17.7). Cardiovascular and all-cause mortality were 6.9% and 10.1%, respectively, with low rates of major complications, Conclusion T-TEER is an effective and safe treatment option for high-risk patients with severe TR, providing significant reduction in regurgitation, favorable right ventricular remodeling and consistent improvements in symptoms, exercise capacity and QoL