BACKGROUND: Long-term mortality risk is seldom re-assessed in contemporary clinical practice following successful transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVR). Unsupervised machine learning permits pattern discovery within complex multidimensional patient data and may facilitate recognition of groups requiring closer post-TAVR surveillance. METHODS: We analysed and differentiated routinely collected demographic, biochemical, and cardiac imaging data into distinct clusters using unsupervised machine learning. k-means clustering was performed on data from 200 patients who underwent TAVR for severe aortic stenosis (AS). Input features were ranked according to their influence on cluster assignment. Survival analyses were performed with Kaplan-Meier and Cox proportional hazards models. Nested cox models were used to identify any incremental prognostic benefit cluster assignment achieved beyond conventional risk scores. RESULTS: Analysis identified two distinct clusters. Compared to Cluster 1, Cluster 2 demonstrated significantly worse all-cause mortality at 12 months (HR 6.3, CONCLUSION: k-means clustering identified two prognostically distinct phenogroups of patients who had undergone TAVR with better discriminatory power than conventional risk and frailty calculators. Our results highlight the utility of machine learning applications for clinical risk prediction and scope to improve patient surveillance.