There is a moulded Perpendicular style west doorway with carved spandrels, a very large four-light west window and two-light traceried belfry windows.
The piers are lozenge-shaped, the west and east shafts with moulded capitals, supporting Tudor arches.
C19 brass communion rails with flower ornament.
1900 between the choir and aisles with delicate tracery carving.
Choir stalls, probably early C20, have shouldered ends carved with blind tracery.
Polygonal timber pulpit of c.
1906, carved with figures of saints and a bishop under canopies.
The south wall of the chapel is carved with panelling and the east wall retains two sections of decayed canopy work.
In the centre of the chapel, on a floor of C19 encaustic tiles, there is a copy of the old font.
SP0343 : Evesham, St. Lawrence's Church: The font
Good stained glass includes the east window of 1862 by Thomas Willement, north and south sanctuary windows by Gibbs, 1864 and c.
Sources Brooks and Pevsner, Worcestershire, 2007, 292-4 REASONS FOR DESIGNATION DECISION: St Lawrence's, Evesham, is listed, for the following principal reasons: * as part of a remarkable group of medieval ecclesiatical buildings associated with Evesham Abbey * for the quality and ambition of the late medieval fabric, having a spectacular east end ensemble and a fan-vaulted chapel. * as the major restoration of 1836 by E Eginton in the context of a puritan tradition of worship at that date has made a positive contribution to the architectural consistency of the building.