Dippenaaria luxurians is a very small spider, with males measuring less than 3 mm in total length. The
cephalothorax and
opisthosoma are dark reddish-brown, while the legs are yellowish-brown. The
cephalothorax is notably very high in profile, and there is no visible fovea. The spider has eight eyes arranged in two rows, with the anterior median eyes being the smallest; the posterior eye row is recurved. The clypeus is prominent. The sternum is approximately as wide as it is long, and extends between the fourth coxae by more than twice their diameter. The legs are short and robust. The tibia has distinctive spine arrangements, with tibia I bearing a retrodistal spine and a long hair-shaped bristle prodistally, and metatarsi I-II having thin spines. The male possesses a large dorsal scutum on the opisthosoma that almost completely covers it both dorsally and ventrally. The
pedipalps are distinctive, with the femur unmodified and the patella having a long ventral apophysis. The tibia has an outstanding dorsal apophysis and a long outgrowth retrofrontally. The cymbium bears a long thorn retrobasally, and the embolus is very long and twisting, with a wide seam ending distally-ventrally. Only males are described; females have been found, but not yet described. ==Conservation status==