Coelopoeta phaceliae is a moth in the superfamily Gelechioidea. It is found in the US state of California.
The species was described in 1995 by Lauri Kaila. The holotype is a male reared by R. E. Dietz and P. A. Opler from a caterpillar (J. Powell 70F95) collected on Fandango Pass, Modoc County, at elevation, on 12 or 13 June 1970, which emerged from its cocoon on 7 July (of the same year), although specimens are known to have been collected since at least 1962. It is kept at the Essig Museum of Entomology, University of California, Berkeley.
The length of the forewings is 4.5âÂÂ6 mm. The ground color of the forewings is , densely mottled, mostly with brown scales. The hindwings are gray. The larvae are undescribed in the original description.
Coelopoeta phaceliae would appear to be endemic to California, occurring from central to northern parts of the state, with specimens having been collected from Fandango Pass in Modoc County, the San Bruno Mountains in San Mateo County, nine miles east of McCloud in Siskiyou County, and three miles northwest of Portola and one mile south of Meadow Valley in Plumas County.
It appears to be sympatric with C. glutinosi.
It has been collected at altitudes of . Moths reared from collected larvae have emerged from their cocoon from 7 May to 23 July.
The larvae have been reared from Phacelia species, including P. californica, P. hastata ÃÂ mutabilis, P. procera and P. mutabilis. They mine the leaves of their host plant.