The building is home to the confraternity of the rosary. It has a single hall with chapels on either side of the chancel, which is narrower than the nave. Three diaphragm arches, two round arches and one pointed arch with decorated coffered soffit, divide the nave into four bays. The roof is made of wooden beams. The church, dating from the 16th-17th centuries, has numerous remodels. The facade has a flat finial and a two-light bell gable. In the center opens the only two-window doorway. In addition to the characteristic “cannuga” statues, of Spanish tradition, with only the ends carved in wood and dressed in precious fabric clothes are preserved sculptures of St. Joseph, St. Francis of Paola, St. Efisio, made of carved and polychromed wood, assignable to sari sculptors active in the 18th century.