Parish church St. Jadwiga Śląska is a brick and brick building in the Gothic and Neo-Gothic style, with a 47-meter tower. In the baroque interior, it is worth paying attention to, among others on the late Baroque main altar with a picture of the patron of the church and the city of Dębica, side altars in the late Baroque and Rococo style, a Renaissance epitaph built into the tombstone of the Trzecieski, a rococo pulpit and an 18th-century baptismal font.
Dębicka parish was founded in the 13th century. The first church burned down in the mid-16th century, while the current church was consecrated in 1650. The temple has been renovated and expanded many times, including after the damage it suffered during the Swedish invasion and the Second World War. Among the distinguished figures buried in its underground is the Grand Crown Referender, Antoni Mikołaj Radziwiłł.
One of the bells in the church belfry dates from 1423.