The North American clade (NAC) of Ceratocystis includes pathogenic species that infect a wide range of woody hosts. Previous phylogenetic analyses have suggested that this clade includes cryptic species and a paraphyletic C. variospora. In this study, we used morphological data and phylogenetic analyses to characterize NAC taxa, including Ceratocystis isolates causing a serious disease of almond trees in California. Phylogenetic analyses based on six gene regions supported two new species of Ceratocystis. Ceratocystis destructans is introduced as the species causing severe damage to almond trees in California, and it has also been isolated from wounds on Populus and Quercus in Iowa. It is morphologically similar to C. tiliae, a pathogen on Tilia and the most recently characterized species in the NAC. Ceratocystis betulina collected from Betula platyphylla in Japan is also newly described and is the sister taxon to C. variospora. Our six-locus phylogenetic analyses and morphological characterization resolved several cryptic species in the NAC.