The stem-clasping Othonna perfoliata leaves are well spaced upon the thin stems, spiralling around it.
The leaves are mostly arrow-shaped, sometimes round, ostentatiously lobed or eared at the base. The leaf margins are entire, tapering to rounded or pointed tips, a tiny, hair-like mucro (sharp point or protruding part of the midrib) visible at leaf tips in picture. Occasionally wavy near the margins, some leaf margins appear rolled under.
There is a cream-coloured midrib on the glossy, bright green blade surface, as well as slightly angular routes followed by a few lateral veins, meandering in the general direction of the margins. The leaves are sometimes fleshy, even thinly succulent, or not.
The specific epithet, perfoliata, is derived from the Latin words per meaning thoroughly or very and folium meaning leaf, referring to the stem-clasping or excessive lobing at the leaf base surrounding the stem.
A leaf that surrounds or clasps the stem is described as amplexicaul. One of the earlier scientific names of this plant was O. amplexifolia (Vlok and Schutte-Vlok, 2010; Manning, 2009; Moriarty, 1997; Manning and Goldblatt, 1996; iSpot; Andrew, 2017).