Sedum cyprium is a small, upright
stonecrop that usually completes its
life cycle in one or two years. Mature plants stand 7–33 cm tall on a short, thickened root-stock about a centimetre wide. At the base they form a tight rosette, up to 9 cm across, of thick, spatula-shaped leaves that are 2.4–5 cm long and 0.5–1.2 cm wide; these leaves are smooth, fleshy and rounded at the tip but taper gradually toward the stalk. Higher up the stem the leaves become progressively smaller (4–7 mm long), elliptic to narrowly , and many are edged with minute, sticky glandular hairs that give the surface a slightly tacky feel; most of these upper leaves are shed as the
inflorescence develops. The flowering stem carries a slender, somewhat sticky made up of overlapping (small, repeatedly branched clusters). This inflorescence is 5–22 cm long and at most 4.5 cm wide at the base, giving it a narrow cylindrical to pyramidal outline. Each tiny flower has a five-lobed whose lance-shaped teeth are only about a millimetre long and is surrounded by equally small, dull brownish-red 2.5–3 mm in length. Ten with short, sometimes downy surround the . After
pollination the plant produces erect, reddish-brown
seed capsules () roughly 3 mm long; the persistent are at least twice this length. The seeds themselves are minute (about 0.5 mm) and elongated-egg-shaped, marked with fine red streaks. Field collections show that the species flowers from late June into July, when plants growing on sun-baked rocks can turn a striking bronze-red before setting seed. ==Habitat and distribution==