[1][2][3] Its long, slender legs and tail give it a spider-like impression and allow it to climb in its rocky habitat.
[2] Agamura persica has a light-grey upper body with yellow pigment and five dark crossbars almost as broad as the interspaces, with 9 to 10 on the tail and a flecked grey belly.
cruralis is found in the western regions (most of Iran) and is differentiated by "five darker brown dorsal crossbars, first on nape, fifth on sacrum, nine to ten on tail".
[2] The Persian spider gecko inhabits rocky and stony terrain close to sandy semidesert, on hill slopes and barren plains.
[2][1] The male Agamura persica has an obvious hemipenal bulge visual from a side profile.