The amber forest cockroach is a slender cockroach. The light brown body of the adult animal measuring between 9 and 14 mm long, the antennae are about twice as long as the body. The legs are noticeably spiny. The pronotum has a uniform light brown color and is translucent at the edge. In both sexes, the wings protrude above the tip of the abdomen, they are sometimes finely dotted. Normally the species can be distinguished from
similar species in Central Europe by the uniformly pale, translucent pronotum. In case of doubt, further characteristics are to be used for a reliable determination. Their affiliation to the genus Ectobius can be seen in the spines on the underside of the middle and rear thighs of the legs; these do not have rows of spines, but only one or two spines. The shape of the stylus (an attachment at the tip of the abdomen)
and the shape of a glandular field on the upper side of the abdomen in the male are to be used for a reliable identification of the species. The ootheca of the female is 2.9 to 4.9 millimeters long and slightly curved lengthways. The dividing lines of the egg chambers shine through as fine transverse lines. The surface is sculptured with fine longitudinal ribs. The underside of the females' abdomen is predominantly yellowish in color,
with narrow dark transverse bands that widen towards the center. The glandular pits of the males are very large, taking up more than a third of the segment width of the 8th tergite, and are oval-shaped and trough-like in depth. It has long hairs on the front and back wall. The styli at the end of the abdomen are large.

