Church of Archangel Michael is a small single-nave church with a semicircular apse, without a belfry, of a distinct rustic form. It was built from quarried stone. The doors are arched, with a wide-arched niche painted with the fresco of the church’s patron saint - Archangel Michael. On the south wall and the apse there is a gun-slit window. The roof is made of stone tiles. The interior has a semicircular sinter arch. On the lateral walls, between the two pairs of pilasters, there are slanted arches, of unequal spans. The Holy Table is circular. The floor is made of uneven stone tiles.
Frescoes indicate that the church was painted in 1605, courtesy of Duke Ivan Petrović Banjanin, his mother Margita and his sons. There are standing figures of saints and an extensive scene from the Judgement Day painted in the first part. The arch is painted with scenes of church holidays, while the top of the arch has medallions with the image of Christ. Frescoes are notable because of their rough drawing and intense colours.

