St Meubred's Church is built of local slatestone rubble with granite detailing, with the south porch and west tower constructed in granite ashlar. It has slate roofs with decorative ridge tiles over the nave and chancel. The church has a simple medieval plan, with a combined nave and chancel, flanked by north and south aisles, a south porch, a north vestry, and a three-stage west tower. From the outside, the nave is mostly hidden by the aisles. The chancel is lit by a large multi-light
Perpendicular east window, while the aisles contain similar medieval windows. The gabled south porch features a sundial dated 1739 above its entrance. Inside the porch is a 15th-century wooden roof with carved supporting beams and decorative bosses. The interior features a number of medieval stone fittings, including seating for clergy in the chancel, a piscina, an aumbry, and a tomb recess. A reused carved stone associated with the dedication to St Meubred is incorporated into the chancel fabric. The nave and aisles retain well-preserved medieval wagon roofs with carved bosses, including a Green Man motif. The west tower consists of three stages, with weathered buttresses and an embattled
parapet. The west doorway and window are decorated with carved granite panels featuring quatrefoils, stars, and heraldic designs. Historic furnishings and monuments include a medieval stone font, 15th-century carved bench ends, and a plaster coat of arms of Charles II dated 1661. A painted letter of thanks from Charles I, dating to 1643, also survives. Memorials include a brass to Thomas Awmarle, rector (c. 1400), as well as slate, marble, and painted monuments from the 17th to 19th centuries. On the south side of the chancel is a 14th-century Easter sepulchre, sometimes identified as the tomb of St Meubred, with a carved niche above. ==Churchyard==