This minaret, one of the oldest in Spain, is older than those of Árchez, Corumbela and Salares, and a twin of the one that disappeared in Arenas. Its interior is narrow, designed only for the passage of the muezzin.
With a square floor plan, it has four sections of different heights separated by imposts. Its interior houses a quadrangular staircase around a central pillar. The second section is notable for its blind horseshoe arches and its Mudejar finial with bells in semicircular openings. The tower, with a four-sided roof, is supported by a light-coloured wooden frame.