The phylogenetic relationships of
Sclerocephalus are uncertain. It was traditionally considered a close relative of the genus
Onchiodon, and both were placed in the family
Actinodontidae. Actinodontidae was thought to be closely related to the family
Eryopidae, and is now considered a synonym of that group. However, while
Sclerocephalus shares some similarities with eryopids, it also shares much in common with a group of large-bodied, semiaquatic temnospondyls called
Stereospondylomorpha.
Sclerocephalus and
Onchiodon are no longer thought to be closely related, and while
Onchiodon remains a close relative of eryopids,
Sclerocephalus is often grouped near the genus
Archegosaurus as a
basal stereospondylomorph. The most commonly accepted phylogeny of temnospondyls (first proposed by Yates and Warren [2000]) divides the group into two different branches called
Limnarchia and
Euskelia. Limnarchia is a diverse Mesozoic clade that includes Stereospondylomorpha. Euskelia is a smaller Paleozoic clade that includes Eryopidae and the group
Dissorophoidea, which may have given rise to modern amphibians. An earlier phylogeny proposed by Boy (1990) takes a different view, combining Eryopidae and Stereospondylomorpha into the group
Eryopoidea, with dissorophoids as distant relatives. If this phylogeny is correct,
Sclerocephalus would be a basal member of Eryopoidea, close to the ancestry of most other stereospondylomorphs. Schoch & Witzmann (2009) found support for the Eryopoidea clade. They included
Sclerocephalus in their phylogenetic analysis and found it to nest at the base of
Stereospondylomorpha. Below is a
cladogram from their study: }} ==Notes==