[1] The vestry is constructed in brick, and the rest of the church is in grey lias rubble.
Its plan consists of a nave, a lower and narrower chancel, a south porch, a north vestry, and a west tower.
The tower is in three stages, with diagonal buttresses on the west corners, and a stair turret on the south east.
[4] The top stage contains a two-light bell opening on each side, and at the summit of the tower is an embattled parapet.
On the west wall of the nave are boards containing the Lord's Prayer, the Ten Commandments and the Apostles' Creed.
[1] In the chancel are a number of monuments to the Russell family, the earliest dating from the later part of the 14th century.
A Baroque wall monument to Sir Francis Russell, who died in 1705, and his wife, is by Edward Stanton.
[6] In the churchyard is the base of a medieval cross which is designated as a Grade II listed building.