The describers assigned
Faxinalipterus to the Pterosauria, based on its long hollow limbs and saddle-shaped upper joint of the relatively short and robust humerus, suitable to perform a wing stroke. They saw it as perhaps the oldest pterosaur known, as it possibly predates European finds from the Norian. they see that the possible age difference between pterosaurs cannot be large as an indication of rapid evolution in early pterosaurs. Because the Caturrita Formation consists of terrestrial sandstones, that evolution would have had its origins in a terrestrial, not coastal, habitat. They also concluded
Faxinalipterus is the most basal known pterosaur, basal features including a lack of fusion between
tibia and
fibula, a thin
radius and a
coracoid that has not fused to the
scapula. However,
Alexander Kellner has suggested
Faxinalipterus might be not be a pterosaur but a basal member of the
Pterosauromorpha instead or, if the lack of fusion between tibia and fibula is
plesiomorphic, even a sister taxon of the
Ornithodira. Fabio Marco Dalla Vecchia (2013) stated that he was "unable to find any unequivocal pterosaur features" in the known fossils of
F. minima; in fact, according to the author, "the purported humerus is quite unlike the humeri of the Triassic pterosaurs". Dalla Vecchia did not consider
Faxinalipterus to be a pterosaur, but did not state what group of vertebrates it belonged to.
Faxinalipterus was reinterpreted as an early member of
Lagerpetidae by Kellner and colleagues in 2022, who also removed the maxilla from the referred specimens and assigned it to the newly named basal pterosauromorph
Maehary. }} A 2025 analysis of Triassic avemetatarsalians by Garcia & Müller recovers the lagerpetids as a paraphyletic group to the pterosaurs, and
Faxinalipterus not as a pterosauromorph but as a sister taxon to the Ornithodira, more closely related to them than to
Mambachiton and
Aphanosauria. == See also ==