Thalassemia minor has a good prognosis, whereas thalassemia major (TM) is a severe disease, and the long-term prognosis depends on the treatment adherence to transfusion and iron chelation therapies. To our knowledge, there are no reported thalassemia cases that underwent kidney transplant. We aimed to highlight a successful kidney transplant in a patient with TM with stable graft function after 16 months of follow-up. In our case, repeated blood transfusions were inevitably associated with iron overload despite iron chelating agents. Moreover, she developed anti-HLA antibodies, but fortunately, there were no donor-specific antibodies, which facilitated the procedure of renal transplant that was performed on 17/3/2019. After 6 weeks of transplant, she started follow-up in the clinic and resumed iron chelation using deferasirox along with much less frequent blood transfusion. After more than 20 months of follow-up, she is enjoying stable graft function, hemoglobin around 9.2 g/dl, and with occasional trace proteinuria. This is a case report showing a β-TM case can undergo renal transplant with no contraindications under special circumstances, and it is the first case in the literature.