This species is a perennial herb with creeping to spreading stems that branch freely and can reach up to in length. The stems are densely covered with soft hairs. The leaves are borne on short stalks and have fairly firm, broadly ovate to almost kidney-shaped blades, long. The upper surface is brownish and bristly, while the underside is paler, covered in dense hairs, dotted with glands, and shows a net-like pattern of veins. The leaves have a rounded to slightly pointed tip, a broadly heart-shaped base, and shallowly scalloped margins. The flowers are arranged in a loose
inflorescence of two to four whorls, sometimes forming a short cluster. Each whorl bears four to six flowers. The
calyx is moderately hairy and glandular. The
corolla is white to pale mauve, with a short tube and two lips, the lower lip longer and curved downward.
Identification Stachys reticulata can be confused with other members of the so-called
Stachys aethiopica Complex. From
Stachys natalensis, it can be distinguished by its 4–6-flowered whorls, against the latter's two. Its spreading calyx teeth and net-like pattern of veins on the underside of the leaves help separate it from
Stachys aethiopica, while in
Stachys rehmannii the hairs are stellate, not simple. ==Distribution and habitat==