[2] By the time it was vested in the Churches Conservation Trust in the 2000s, the building was in a state of decay and it had been vandalised.
The church is constructed in local limestone and ironstone, the roofs being a mixture of clay tiles and Welsh slate.
The bell openings in the top stage are paired; the lights being separated by a shaft with a cushion capital.
In the south wall of the transept is a doorway with a pointed moulded arch flanked by buttresses.
Around the chancel apse is blind arcading consisting of marble shafts and limestone arches with decorated capitals, rising from a string course.
[3] The fittings date from the 1861 restoration and include a carved font, a stone pulpit on a marble base, and a full set of pitch pine pews.