Its plan consists of a nave, a chancel, a north porch, a south vestry, and twin west towers.
The top stage contains tall bell openings, and on the summit of the towers are pierced friezes with crocketed pinnacles on the corners.
Set inside the east wall of the north porch is a 14th-century headless statue of the Virgin and Child discovered during the rebuilding of the church.
[1] The nave has a hammerbeam roof decorated with wooden angels carved by James Minns, a local master-carver.
[2] The architect of the church and designer of the fittings and stained glass was the rector, Rev Whitwell Elwin, from 1853 to 1860 the editor of the Quarterly Review.
[2][5] According to the Churches Conservation Trust guidebook the west doorway was inspired by a doorway at Glastonbury Abbey, the triangular opening above the chancel arch by Lichfield Cathedral, the stained glass in the nave windows from St Mary's Church at Temple Balsall, Warwickshire, and that in the west window by St Stephen's Chapel in the Palace of Westminster.