The lichen body (
thallus) forms a thin, continuous crust that is pale grey to grey and smooth to slightly granular. A black basal layer () may or may not be present. The species reproduces vegetatively by
soredia (powdery granules), which are floury (), pale citron yellow when fresh (paler in dried
herbarium material), and grouped into discrete clusters (soralia) up to about 1 mm across; these are scattered over the thallus rather than forming a confluent sorediate mass. A later revision described the thallus as smooth to granular and the rounded soralia as 0.2–1.4 mm in diameter. The thallus contains discrete clusters of large
oxalate crystals, which become visible as translucent spots when the surface is moistened and can help in recognising sterile material. Fruiting bodies (
apothecia) are uncommon and small, reaching about 1 mm across and typically 0.3–0.9 mm in diameter. They are initially rounded but may later become irregular; the thallus-derived rim () is at first distinct but later disappears. The is level with the margin when mature and usually pale green to brownish green, only rarely becoming almost black. Under the microscope, the
asci each contain eight simple, colourless spores that are broadly oval (
ellipsoid) and measure 8.5–14.5 × 5.5–8.0 μm. Standard
spot tests on the thallus and soredia are negative, or at most faintly yellow with
potassium hydroxide solution. The species is also chemically distinctive in containing 2-O-methylsulphurellin, reported as unique to this species. ==Similar species==