Basidiocarps are
agaricoid, up to 10 cm (4 in) tall, the cap convex at first (never conical), becoming flat when expanded, up to 7.5 cm (3 in) across. The cap surface is smooth, distinctly viscid when damp, bright lemon-yellow to orange-yellow (rarely orange to red). The
lamellae (gills) are waxy, pale cap-coloured, and adnexed (narrowly attached to the stipe). The
stipe (stem) is smooth, cylindrical or compressed and grooved, cap-coloured, and moist to somewhat viscid when damp. The
spore print is white, the spores (under a microscope) smooth,
inamyloid, ellipsoid, about 7.5 to 9.0 by 4.0 to 5.5
μm.
Similar species The North American
Hygrocybe flavescens is very similar in appearance, but is said to have a drier stipe. Boertmann (2010) has suggested it may not be distinct from
H. chlorophana.
Hygrocybe glutinipes is similarly coloured, but is typically smaller with a glutinous, semi-translucent cap and an equally glutinous stipe.
Hygrocybe ceracea is also similarly coloured, but has a waxy (not viscid) cap and stipe and broadly attached, almost
decurrent gills. ==Distribution and habitat==