[4] In 2015, Wayne Maddison placed it in the subtribe Aelurillina, which he positioned in the tribe Aelurillini within the clade Saltafresia.
[7] It has a brown carapace with a pair of white streaks, one along the edge of the body and the other stretching from the front to back.
The abdomen has markings that are more typical for spiders from the Phlegra genus, with three white stripes on a black background.
[8] It differs from the similar Stenaelurillus siyamae, also found in the same area, by the way that the copulatory openings face backwards.
It was discovered in a house, which implies a level of comfort the spider has living in areas of human habitation.