Background-Gyrification features reflect brain development in the early prenatal environment. Clarifying the nature of these features in psychosis can help shed light on the role of early developmental insult. However, the literature is currently widely discrepant, which may reflect confounds related to formally psychotic patient populations or overreliance on a single cortical surface morphometry(CSM) feature. Methods-The present study compares CSM features of gyrification in clinical high-risk (CHR, n=43) youth during the prodromal risk period to typically developing controls over two time points across three metrics; local gyrification index(lGI), mean curvature index(MCI), and sulcal depth (improving resolution and examination of change over 1-year). Results-Gyrification was stable over time, supporting that gyrification reflects early insult rather than abnormal development/reorganization associated with the disease state. Each of the indices highlighted unique, aberrant features in the CHR group with respect to controls. Specifically, lGI reflected hypogyrification in lateral orbitofrontal, superior bank of the superior temporal sulcus, anterior isthmus of the cingulate, and temporal poles; MCI indicated sharper gyral and flatter/wider sulcal peaks in the cingulate, post-central, and lingual gyrus; sulcal depth identified shallow features in parietal, superior temporal sulcus, and cingulate regions. Further, both MCI and sulcal depth converged on abnormal features in the parietal cortex. Conclusions-Gyrification metrics suggest early developmental insult and provides support for neurodevelopmental hypotheses. Observations of stable CSM features across time provide context for interpreting extant studies and speak to CSM as a promising stable marker/endophenotype. Collectively, findings support the importance of considering multiple CSM features.