The parish church is a Grade I
listed building, dedicated to
Saint Botolph, dating from the 13th century. The
font is 13th-century. There is a gravestone to a rector of the parish who died in 1413, set in the
chancel floor. The church is now redundant. Saltfleet has a Grade II listed 19th-century
windmill. There are two
public houses; the New Inn, a Grade II listed building, dating from the 17th century, and The Crown Inn, which is over 200 years old. Opposite the New Inn is the Manor House, built in 1673, a date referred to as inscribed against the names of Robert Fox and Jane Hardy in a first floor room.
Lincolnshire Life magazine published articles on the Manor House: in February 2008 in its Homes and Gardens page; in May 1970; and during the 1960s when it mentioned former occupants, including the 1670s owner, Lord Willoughby, a friend of
Oliver Cromwell. Adjacent to the Manor House is a red brick
Methodist chapel dating from 1815. A listed
limestone village pump was erected in 1899 in memory of F. A. Freshney who died from wounds inflicted while fighting in
South Africa. Some Roman pottery has been found in the village. ==Governance==