The Haplogynae are one of the two major groups into which araneomorph spiders were traditionally divided, the other being the Entelegynae. In 2005,
Coddington summarized the relationships of these groups as suggested by morphological
phylogenetic studies: }} Subsequent molecular phylogenetic studies have confirmed the
monophyly of some of the groups suggested by morphological studies, while rejecting many others. A study published in 2015 suggested that two families formerly placed in the Haplogynae do not belong there.
Filistatidae groups with
Hypochilidae at the base of the Haplogynae;
Leptonetidae is basal to the Entelegynae. The similarity of some morphological features of Leptonetidae to those of entelegynes had already been noted. }} In 2016, a large
molecular phylogenetic study was published online that included 932 spider species, representing all but one of the then known families. It "refutes important higher-level groups", including Paleocribellatae, Neocribellatae, Araneoclada and Haplogynae. In the preferred cladogram, the "Haplogynae" are divided among a number of clades basal to the Entelegynae, forming at most a grade. "Haplogynae" in the sense of Coddington (2005) are shaded yellow in the cladogram below; Entelegynae in the same sense are shaded blue. The clade
Synspermiata comprises all the ecribellate haplogynes and is consistently recovered, but with low support. }} ==Families==