The A283 road runs directly through the town and connects Storrington to Steyning in the east and Pulborough in the west.
Storrington is listed in the Domesday Book as "Estorchestone", meaning a place well known for storks.
Nikolaus Pevsner, noted only the small door in Browns Lane, the church, and the Dominican convent known as the Abbey to be historically significant.
Current public transport provision consists of two hourly bus routes: the 1 between Worthing and Midhurst (operated by Stagecoach South), and the 100 between Burgess Hill and Pulborough (operated by Compass Travel), both stopping at the bus station outside of Waitrose.
[7] Kithurst Hill which rises steeply above the village is marked at the summit by a trig point, 699 feet (213 metres) above sea level.
[8] St Joseph's Hall in Greyfriars Lane is a Grade II listed [9] former residence of the Bishop of Arundel and Brighton.
It was built as a private house for US businessman George Trotter in 1910, and then sold to a French religious order, the Norbertines.
[10] Parham Park, towards Pulborough, is a country house with rolling parkland with a large herd of maintained deer.