Fork-tailed woodnymph males are long and weigh . Females are long and weigh . Both sexes of all subspecies have a straight, black, medium-length bill. Adult males of the
nominate subspecies have mostly dark bronzy green upperparts, dark dusky bronze crown and nape, and a violet band across the upper back. Their throat is glittering green, the belly violet, and the undertail
coverts dark steely blue with dull white edges. Their tail is forked and blue-black. The nominate adult female has bright green upperparts with a duller and more bronze crown. Its underparts are pale gray. The tail is green near the base and the rest steely blue-black with white tips on the outer three pairs of feathers. Juvenile males are dull bronze-green above and dusky bronze-green below. Juvenile females are more bronzy green above than the adult and some feathers have buffy fringes. Subspecies
T. f. refulgens and
T. f. orenocensis are essentially like the nominate.
T. f. fissilis males have solid blue undertail coverts.
T. f. nigrofasciata males have golden-green upperparts, a band of black between the extensive green throat and the violet belly, and a gap in the violet band on the upper back. The male
T. f. viridipectus also has a large green
gorget with a narrow black band between it and the belly.
T. f. jelskiis lower throat and breast have a blue tinge and an incomplete black band. The male
T. f. balzani has a green crown and pure white undertail coverts.
T. f. furcatoides males are somewhat larger than the nominate and have a blackish crown.
T. f. boliviana males have a relatively small green gorget and sometimes some small black patches where others have a band.
T. f. simoni is very like
balzani but with a dark stripe in the center of the vent area and undertail coverts. Males of
T. f. baeri and
T. f. eriphile have glittering green foreheads and blackish crowns. Females of the different subspecies differ mainly in the darkness of their gray underparts and sometimes the undertail coverts; their crowns and upperparts differ much like those of the respective males. ==Distribution and habitat==