Oedera capensis is a prickly, sprawling shrublet of about high, that produces between two and six branches below the flower heads of the previous season. Stems are densely and alternately set with mostly hairless, erect to recurved, flat, leathery, narrow triangular leaves long and , with
glands and silky hairs along the edges. Usually nine (rarely ten or eleven) flower heads are cropped at the tip of the branches in what seems at first sight a single flower head of mostly in diameter. The central head consists of yolk yellow
disc florets only, while the remainder has disc florets and in addition a row of yolk yellow
ray florets, burgundy on the reverse, where they do not touch the other heads. A cluster of cropped heads usually has 30 to 40 ray florets. A few shorter ray florets sometimes occur where the heads touch. The
involucre that surrounds the cropped heads consist of several whorls of green, leaf-like bracts of usually wide, lanceolate, widest at midlength and with a prominent rib along the midline. The inner row of bracts surrounding the cropped heads have dense, silky hair in the lower part of their edges. The involucral bracts between the individual heads are thin and papery. The
pappus consists of a circle of scales around the tip of the
cypselas. Flowering usually appears from June to September, rarely extending to December. This species has seven sets of homologue chromosomes (2n=14).
Differences with other species Oedera imbricata has bright yellow flower heads, not yolk yellow. == Taxonomy ==