Plant roots are essential organs that enable efficient uptake of water and nutrients, provide anchorage in the soil, and host mutualistic microbes that enhance mineral acquisition. The rise and diversification of vascular plants—including lycophytes, ferns, and seed plants—across terrestrial ecosystems were greatly facilitated by the evolution of rooting capacity. Fossil evidence indicates that root branching evolved multiple times independently during vascular plant evolution. Ferns occupy a pivotal phylogenetic position as the sister lineage to seed plants and develop roots, including lateral branches, in highly regular patterns driven by ordered divisions of root stem cells. However, the molecular mechanisms governing lateral root stem cell specification in ferns remain largely unknown. The aim of this project was to elucidate the transcriptional changes associated with lateral root development in the fern Ceratopteris at single-cell resolution and to identify key transcription factors involved in lateral root stem cell specification. To achieve this aim, we employed an integrated combination of molecular, cell biological, and genetic approaches.