Two basic patterns describe local plant community assembly and functioning: the species abundance distribution (SAD) and the distribution of species functional traits (TAD). These patterns have been extensively studied for dominant and rare plants, while subordinates, the species of intermediate abundance in a community, have received less research attention although this group is most species rich and important for community functioning. Here, we study the functional role of subordinate species (those covering the intermediate 50% of abundance ranks) using a large data set of Palearctic dry and semi-dry grassland plant communities and data on specific leaf area, seed mass and plant height. Theory predicts that dominant and subordinate plants should be functionally complementary. However, our findings indicate that species rank orders of SADs and TADs tend to be negatively correlated, causing the TAD to have higher evenness than the associated SAD. Subordinate species represented on average less than 15% of total plant abundance and trait space. Functional diversity of subordinates was lower than expected by a null model that assumed an equiprobable random distribution of trait values among plant species. Climate seasonality in combination with elevation, appeared to be the most important drivers of subordinate abundance and functional diversity. We conclude that subordinates differ from dominants in trait composition, leading to partial functional complementarity. We hypothesise that both groups are assembled through different processes and habitat filtering, partly triggered by local climatic conditions.