Abstract:[Objective] To compare the clinical outcomes of femoral neck system (FNS) versus traditional 3 cannulated compressionscrews (CCS) for femoral neck fractures in the young and middle-aged. [Methods] A retrospective study was done on 94 patients who re-ceived internal fixation for femoral neck fractures from November 2019 to June 2020. According to doctor-patient communication, 46 pa-tients had fractures fixed with FNS while the remaining 48 patients were treated with CCS. The perioperative, follow-up and imagingdocumants were compared between the two groups. [Results] All patients in both groups had operation finished successfully without any se-rious complications, such as neurovascular injury. The FSN group proved significantly superior to the CCS group in terms of operation time,intraoperative blood loss, intraoperative fluoroscopy and hospital stay (P<0.05). All of them in both groups were followed up for (15.5±1.6)months on an average, and the FNS group returned to full weight-bearing activity significantly earlier than the CCS group (P<0.05). TheHarris score, hip extension-flexion range of motion (ROM) and internal-external rotation ROM significantly increased (P<0.05), while theVAS score significantly decreased in both groups over time (P<0.05), which in the FNS group were significantly better than the CCS groupone month after surgery (P<0.05), and became not statistically significant between the two groups at 6 months after surgery and the latest fol-low-up (P>0.05). Radiographically, Garden alignment index significantly improved in both groups postoperatively compared with that be-fore operation (P<0.05), which proved not significantly different between the two groups at any time points accordingly (P>0.05). At 6months and the latest follow-up, femoral neck shortening in the FNS group was significantly less than those in the CCS group (P<0.05), al-though there was no significant difference in fracture healing time between the two groups (P>0.05). At the time points accordingly, the fixa-tion stability in FNS group were significantly better than that in CCS group (P<0.05). With time postoperatively hip degeneration in some extent was noted in both groups, but which was not significantly different in term of Tonnis classification between the two groups at any cor-responding time points (P>0.05). [Conclusion] Compared with traditional CCS internal fixation, FNS is less invasive, more stable, and getsbetter hip function recovery after surgery.