The church of Commerveil is built on a simple plan with a single nave and a straight chevet.
According to the town hall's research, this small church dates from the 11th, 12th and 17th centuries. Its small spire can be seen from afar and its ogival windows match its size.
Inside, the altarpiece dates from the middle of the 18th century. Behind the wooden tabernacle, we discover a painting representing the Assumption of the Virgin.
To the right of the large marble altar, is the statue of Saint Anne and to the left that of the Holy Virgin.
On the side aisles, to the right above the altarpiece of the Sacred Heart, we see in a niche the statue of Saint John the Baptist with a sheep. To the left, above the altarpiece of the Virgin with the Sorrowful Heart, is in a niche a statue of Saint Magdeleine. These two altarpieces, in marble and sculpted stone and partly gilded, date from the 17th and 18th centuries and have been listed as historical monuments since 1982.
At the top of the nave, there is a Christ on the cross, probably made of wood.
A statue of St. Gilles, placed on a wooden base, is located on the back wall of the church.
Note a painted paneled vault that dates from the 19th century.
The restoration of the church was carried out in the early 1980s.