Dove's foot geranium is an annual herb with wooly-haired stems branching from the base and spreading or ascending from 10-40 cm high. Plants can also be fairly glandular on the stems and peduncles. The leaf blades are kidney-shaped, measure 2-5 cm wide with the margins divided about 2/3 of the way to the base into 5-7 wide lobes. Each lobe is itself divided about half their length into 3-5 segments or lobes.
The slender, woolly peduncles are typically longer than the subtending leaves and bear 2 flowers. The soft-hairy sepals lack bristles at their tips. The 5 rose-purple petals are each bi-lobed at their tips and measure 3-5 mm long, or slightly longer than the sepals. 10 fertile stamens are present, with the inner filaments connected into a tube about 1 mm long at their base. The stylar column is 6-8 mm long with the threadlike beak about 2-3 mm long.
As a weedy species, dove's foot geranium may be found in disturbed locations such as waste areas, fields, lawns, roadsides and gardens.
A European species, dove's foot geranium has now been widely introduced throughout much of North America and to the west of the Cascade Mts. in Oregon and Washington.