Stems: creeping, 1–3 mm wide across leafy stem, sympodial, remotely and irregularly pinnate to regularly 1- or 2-pinnate; paraphyllia many, base multiseriate, branches 1- or 2-seriate. Stem: leaves erect to spreading, heteromallous, often remote, broadly ovate, ovate-deltoid, or ovate, strongly plicate (often obscuring costa), not rugose, 0.8–2.5 mm; base not cordate-clasping, not to somewhat decurrent; margins serrulate to nearly entire basally, spinose-serrate to serrate in distal 2/3; apex acute to acuminate; costa single, double, or rarely triple, sometimes 2-fid, 1/3–3/4 leaf length; alar cells not differentiated; laminal cells smooth. Branch: leaves ovate to lanceolate; costa single, double, or 2-fid, 1/2–3/4 leaf length. Capsule: inclined to horizontal; operculum conic; exostome teeth irregularly cross striolate to somewhat reticulate proximally; endostome segments narrowly perforate. North America, Eurasia, n Africa, cool temperate and boreal regions.
Species 3 (2 in the flora). Proximal stem and branch leaves of Hylocomiastrum are distinctly shorter than the more distal and have nearly entire margins, acute to bluntly apiculate apices, and weaker costae. Hylocomiastrum differs from Hylocomium, with which it is often combined, in having shorter-branched paraphyllia, strongly plicate leaves, strong costae that are often single and end in a spine, smooth laminal cells, endostome segments with narrow perforations, and conic-apiculate opercula. The third species in the genus, Hylocomiastrum himalayanum (Mitten) Brotherus, is known from Asia.