The name Alioramini was first coined in 1995 by George Olshevsky, Tracy L. Ford and Seiji Yamamoto only to contain the at-the-time uncertain
Alioramus. Olshevsky classified Alioramini within the base of
Tyrannosaurinae and considered it to be a tribe or a "paratribe" (a name for a
paraphyletic tribe, emphasizing Olshevsky's view that the hypothetical common ancestor of tyrannosaurids could be classified as an alioramin). Alioramini were first described as a clade by Junchang Lü and colleagues in 2014, who defined it as a branch-based clade containing all tyrannosaurids more related to
Alioramus than to
Albertosaurus,
Proceratosaurus, and
Tyrannosaurus. Hence, the clade Alioramini consists of three species, namely
Alioramus altai,
Alioramus remotus, and
Qianzhousaurus sinensis. though others maintain them as separate genera. Alioramini is usually considered to be a part of the Tyrannosaurinae subfamily within the Tyrannosauridae family. This is supported by several features, including a maxillary process of the premaxilla that points upwards; the deep joint surface in the maxilla conceals certain features related to tooth roots; the particular shape of the lacrimal, mostly hidden from view; and an ectopterygoid with a pneumatic recess that possesses a distinctive round or triangular shape. Below is a
cladogram showing a
basal placement of Alioramini within the Tyrannosaurinae, according to Brusatte & Carr (2016). }} In their 2025 description of the non-tyrannosaurid
tyrannosauroid Khankhuuluu, Voris et al. (2025) proposed a novel arrangement of tyrannosaurine clades; suggesting that alioramins were a late-diverging clade more closely related to the similarly-aged Tyrannosaurini (
Zhuchengtyrannus,
Tarbosaurus, and
Tyrannosaurus) than previously recognized. The authors reasoned that previous analyses had over-scored anatomical characters related to shallow skull morphology (a trait more common in non-tyrannosaurids and juvenile tyrannosaurids), which resulted in more basal positions for these species. They recognized seven cranial features that alioramins share with tyrannosaurins to the exclusion of other tyrannosaurines. They further argued that the juvenile-like proportions of alioramins were the result of
paedomorphosis, rather than immaturity or being indicative of a basal phylogenetic position. These results are displayed in the cladogram below: ==Paleobiology==