From the two-towered church in Csabd, only the foundations of its southern tower can be seen today. Today's church ruins are original, from the 13th and 14th centuries. its condition in the 19th century was reconstructed with the help of modern tools, based on which it could have been similar to the one in Zsámbék.
The oldest built monument in Csabdi is the church ruin on the hillside above the center of the village. Today's church ruins are original, from the 13th and 14th centuries. in its 19th century form, according to the reconstructions, the influence of the nearby church in Zsámbék can be seen. Due to the lack of sources and valuable finds, nothing is known about the builder of the church and its former residents, its past is almost completely unknown.
The church was a two-towered church with a main nave with a semi-circular sanctuary closure and side naves with straight closures. Today, only the remains of the southern tower can be seen. The width and length of the ships are both 12 meters, the internal width of each ship is 2.15 meters, 4.60 meters, 2.15 meters. The walls are 75 centimeters thick, roughly laid and plastered from limestone and sandstone. The tower has a rectangular plan, open to the side nave.
The towers were probably stone helmeted, the central nave was covered with vaulted ceilings, with a row of windows below the shoulder, the lintels of the lower windows and even the beginning of the vault can still be seen. It is possible that the church had suffered great destruction before, and after that the walled nave remained in use only for a while, which explains the solid longitudinal walls.
The church was surrounded by a protective wall and a moat, within which was the cemetery, which was also used in the 18th century, but people were buried here even at the very beginning of the 19th century. The settlement takes good care of the church's surroundings, the small square occasionally hosts events, and a stage has been erected in front of the church ruins.