Heptapleurum ellipticum, commonly known in Australia as the climbing umbrella tree, is a plant in the family Araliaceae native to the Indian subcontinent, Indochina, Malesia, Papuasia and Australia.
The climbing umbrella tree is a vine or scandent shrub growing up to high and a stem diameter of up to .
The alternately arranged leaves have a petiole measuring long. They are compound with 4 to 7 leaflets arranged palmately. Each leaflet measures around long by wide. They are leathery and glabrous with usually 5-6 pairs of secondary veins.
The inflorescence is about long, with flowers arranged in umbels. The globose fruit are very small, about in diameter.
This species was first described as Sciodaphyllum ellipticum in 1826 by the Dutch botanist Carl Ludwig Blume, based on material collected near Mount Salak, Indonesia. In 1865 it was transferred to the genus Heptapleurum by Berthold Carl Seemann, then to Schefflera by Hermann Harms in 1894, where it remained for more than a century. In 2020 Porter P. Lowry II and Gregory M. Plunkett published a paper in which they resurrected the genus Heptapleurum and transferred a large number of species − including this one − to it from Schlefflera.
The natural range of the climbing umbrella tree is from India through Southeast Asia and Southern China, Melanesia, Papuasia, Christmas Island and northern Australia. In Australia it is restricted to the northeastern parts of Queensland. It grows in mainly in rainforest and gallery forest from near sea level up to .
The plant has been used in traditional medicine as a treatment for a number of ailments, including coughs, edema, toothache and wounds.