Built beginning in 1704 over an earlier, smaller church, possibly from the late 1500s, it is flanked by a tall bell tower, completed in 1689, equipped with bells from the 1600s and 1800s.
It shows a longitudinal layout with a single nave covered with a barrel vault, over which 4 side chapels open.
The style is that of Sardinian Baroque, in its popular vein.
The front elevation shows a central opening surmounted by an architrave bordering a tympanum with a broken segmental arch, 3 windows with stained glass windows, and a “rifleman’s hat” crowned clasp.
The interior has walls divided by 10 pilasters supporting a denticulated entablature. The high altar, executed in polychrome marble and put in place in 1815, houses a precious wooden statue of the Madonna and Child made by the Neapolitan artist Aniello Stellato in the early 1600s, gilded and polychromed in estofado de oro.
Very interesting is the Chapel of the Rosary, which houses a wooden retable from the 18th century, along with valuable wooden statues from the 17th and 18th centuries.
Also worthy of attention is the Chapel of St. Anthony, a baptismal font made of polychrome marble in 1793, the wooden pulpit and, in the sacristy, an 18th-century vestry.