[2] The building consists of a Romanesque nave, chancel and apse, all in local limestone.
The unimpressive fieldstone tower at the western end of the nave was probably added in the late 16th century although it is first mentioned in 1624.
The porch on the south side was completed in 1864, doubtless on the site of an earlier Romanesque structure.
[2] Apart from the font which was made in Gotland in the late Romanesque period (c. 1575), the furnishings are relatively recent.
The altar was rebricked in 1854 and decorated with an altarpiece from 1876 with painting by C. Christian Andersen of Christ and the Canaanite Woman.