Acacia georginae is a foul-smelling, gnarled or spreading tree that typically grows to a height of and has a dense crown. The branchlets are covered with a white to grey, mealy bloom and a few soft hairs pressed against the surface. Its phyllodes are narrowly elliptic, narrowed at both ends, straight to slightly curved, long and wide, covered with the same bloom as on the branchlets, with up to three prominent veins and many indistinct closely parallel veins. The flowers are borne in five to fifteen spherical heads in
racemes long and covered with silky hairs. The heads are on
peduncles long, each head in diameter with 20 to 25 golden yellow flowers. Flowering occurs in most months, and the pods are curved to openly coiled, long, wide, more or less
glabrous and papery. The seeds are flat long and dull dark brown. ==Taxonomy==