How important is the accuracy of my flag choice when flagging a question? Obviously, I do my best to describe a problem with the flag that fits it most accurately, but are there moderation issues if I mis-categorize or otherwise screw up?
It's important.
The type of flag you raise feeds into a number of other systems. Close flags go to the close votes queue. Not an answer and very low quality flags go into the low quality queue.
In fact, accurate flagging is important for generating good review audits:
How does the audit work?
First Posts, Late Answers and Low Quality - The test presents a reviewer with a post that was previously removed by a moderator and known to be of extremely poor quality (flagged as spam, not an answer or very low quality) or high quality (many up-votes, no down-votes, etc).
As nKn noted, the moderators can decline your flag if you flag incorrectly.
If you're unsure what to flag, you could try flagging as Other and include a detailed explanation on what you think the problem is or what you would like the moderator to do.
This question was primarily prompted by looking at my flag count and realizing that 15-20% of my older flags are just chilling. Not declined, I don't think, because they say "active".
I will venture a guess and say these were flags about closing questions. Moderators don't handle those anymore, they just go into the close vote queue.
With the current setup of the Stack Overflow close vote queues (and Stack Overflow only), if you flagged a question and nobody else has flagged or voted to close that question, it is currently hidden from close-vote reviewers and languishing in no-man's land. A number of us have flags like these that will be stuck in suspension until the review queues start showing everything again or just discarding really old flags on the assumption that if there was a problem, someone else would have chimed in by now.