Endiandra discolor is a tree up to tall and very often
buttressed. The bark is brown or brownish grey, smooth on younger trees. The bark of older trees is rougher, with small depressions in the bark which are sometimes inhabited by insects. Twigs and new shoots are covered with fine pale brown to white hairs, and twigs are fluted. The leaves are
simple and arranged alternately on the twigs, measuring up to long and wide. They are
glabrous above and dull grey-green to white below, and held on a
petiole (leaf stalk) up to long. They are
elliptic to
ovate with 3–7 lateral veins either side of the midrib, and conspicuous
foveoles at their junction with the midrib. Inflorescences are
panicles produced in the and are shorter than or as long as the leaves. The scented, creamy green flowers are small and , measuring about long and wide, with three inner and three outer
tepals. The fruit is a shiny black
drupe, about long and wide, containing a single brown seed about long by wide. The thin flesh is green, the cut seed is cream to pink. Like many Australian laurels, the seed is slightly ribbed. ==Taxonomy==