Due to a combination of features seen in
basal ornithischians, basal thyreophorans, and ankylosaurs, a
phylogenetic analysis placed it, according to most data matrices, as a basal thyreophoran, outside the clade
Eurypoda. Riguetti and colleagues (2022) suggested that
Jakapil represents a member of a previously unknown thyreophoran clade. This clade may have diverged from the rest of the thyreophorans during the
Sinemurian. In their 2024 analyses, Fonseca and colleagues recovered
Jakapil as either the sister taxon to
Eurypoda or as the basalmost member of
Ankylosauria. They argued that
Jakapil is likely not a
ceratopsian or
marginocephalian, since this would require 16 additional steps. However, a position within
Parankylosauria only required four additional steps. As such, the authors suggested that this possibility should not be disregarded, even though it is not the most parsimonious position for the taxon. == Paleobiology ==