The church of St. Michael the Archangel was first mentioned in 1545 as a branch of Križevci, although it is much older. Sixty years later it was burnt down by the Turks and a new wooden church was built on another location around 1617. The current church was completed in 1726 and contains a high altar from the second quarter of the 18th century and two side altars dating to 1884.

The Church of St. Michael the Archangel is a fine example of Baroque architecture, also significant for its location in the centre of the market town.

Passing through the polished terracotta portal (1957), you enter the groin-vaulted bell tower (the space below the bell tower), where stone steps lead up past a window with the famous year on the choir stalls. A rectangular stone portal leads into the church itself. The nave is covered by a vaulted ceiling with three pairs of pendentives and four balustrades, all resting on double pilasters with moulded capitals. The brick choir rests on two Tuscan columns and three groin vaults.

The nave opens into the chancel through a semicircular, articulated triumphal arch. The presbytery is vaulted with a pair of buttresses and a three-sided finial resting on the same pilasters as the nave.
The church is 20 metres long, 6 metres wide and 10 metres high.

The entire interior is decorated with figurative paintings by Felix Barazzutti from Graz, dating from 1884.