The Andean plant endemic
Puya
is a striking example of recent and rapid diversification from central Chile to the northern Andes, tracking mountain uplift. This study generated 12 complete plastomes representing nine
Puya
species and compared them to five published plastomes for their features, genomic evolution, and phylogeny. The total size of the
Puya
plastomes ranged from 159,542 to 159,839 bp with 37.3%–37.4% GC content. The
Puya
plastomes were highly conserved in organization and structure with a typical quadripartite genome structure. Each of the 17 consensus plastomes harbored 133 genes, including 87 protein‐coding genes, 38 tRNA (transfer RNA) genes, and eight rRNA (ribosomal RNA) genes; we found 69–78 tandem repeats, 45–60 SSRs (simple sequence repeats), and 8–22 repeat structures among 13 species. Four protein‐coding genes were identified under positive site‐specific selection in
Puya
. The complete plastomes and hypervariable regions collectively provided pronounced species discrimination in
Puya
and a practical tool for future phylogenetic studies. The reconstructed phylogeny and estimated divergence time for the lineage suggest that the diversification of
Puya
is related to Andean orogeny and Pleistocene climatic oscillations. This study provides plastome resources for species delimitation and novel phylogenetic and biogeographic studies.
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