Acacia gregorii, commonly known as Gregory's wattle, is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to the north-west of Western Australia. It is a dense, prostrate or low spreading shrub with elliptic or egg-shaped phyllodes, sometimes with the narrower end towards the base, spherical or oblong heads of golden yellow flowers and crowded, oblong, thinly leathery to crusty pods with one or two seeds.
Acacia gregorii is a dense, prostrate or low-spreading shrub that typically grows to high and wide, its branchlets covered with soft hairs. Its phyllodes are elliptic to egg-shaped, sometimes with the narrower end towards the base, long, wide, more or less wavy with one vein on each side and a sometimes sharp point on the end. There are striated, triangular to egg-shaped stipules long and wide at the base of the phyllodes. The flowers are borne in a spherical or oblong head in axils on a peduncle long, the heads in diameter with 35 to 60 golden yellow flowers. Flowering occurs from June to August, and the pods are crowded, oblong, up to long and wide, thinly leathery to crust and hairy, usually with one or two seeds. The seeds are egg-shaped, slightly shiny dark brown with an aril long.
Gregory's wattle is similar in appearance to A. crispula and A. shuttleworthii which are both found further south. It also shares some affinities with Acacia crassistipula.
Acacia gregorii was first formally described in 1862 by the botanist Ferdinand von Mueller in his Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae from specimens collected near the shores of Nickol Bay and in valleys of "Hearson Island" by Pemberton Wallcott. The specific epithet (gregorii) honours Francis Thomas Gregory whose expedition crossed the Pilbara in 1861.
Gregory's wattle grows in coastal sand or limestone on plains and rocky hills with spinifex or in heath between Quobba and north to near Wickham, including Barrow and Montebello Islands, with an outlier in the Kennedy Range National Park, in the Carnarvon, Gascoyne and Pilbara bioregions of north-western Western Australia.
Acacia gregorii is listed as "not threatened" by the Government of Western Australia Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions.