You can visit Vallby Church whenever you want, it's open every day of the year! That's because the community of the Daughters of Mary is right next door. Step into the church for a moment of silence or to look at the art treasures.
The church as a whole bears witness to the fact that it has been rebuilt and added to many times over the centuries it has stood on the site. The oldest parts were built in the 12th and 13th centuries, but by the early 14th century the church was much longer. Just over a century later, vaulted brick ceilings were added and perhaps the tower was built at the same time, although today it looks as if it was rebuilt in the mid-19th century. The sacristy was built in the 1740s in the style of the time, with a lantern on top.
Inside the church there are Renaissance-style frescoes from the 1520s, while the altarpiece was donated to the church in 1740 by Queen Ulrika Eleonora. On the north wall of the choir hangs a large triumphal crucifix from the 15th century that has had red-colored threads hanging from the body. The threads represented the blood that dripped from Jesus' wounds.