The town hall is two-storeyed, built of small field and quarry stones, which were quarried in the Gewann Steinkaut, called " Steinstück " in earlier centuries. The corners are made of house stones. The round tower attached to the building in the Renaissance style makes it possible to use the upper rooms of the town hall inside completely, as can be seen in many former noble houses in the 16th and 17th centuries.

These rooms are reached via a beautiful stone spiral staircase in the staircase of the round tower. On the broad side of the town hall, one discovers a curved stone archway with the year 1571, below which is the town's coat of arms: the three increasing crescents. The coat of arms of the town, which was set into the stone archway, was found during clearing work at the old cemetery next to the old Simultan church and was clumsily attached to the town hall in 1855, according to people familiar with Saulheim history. Presumably, the knights of Saulheim wore the three crescents on their shields during the crusades. The " pagan coat of arms", the three crescents, was also attached to the tower of the former St Bartholomew's Church to show the solidarity with the villagers. The ground floor of the town hall had round-arched entrances that gave access to an open hall. To make room for a school hall and a teacher's flat, the open round arches were bricked up in 1855. This compromised the structural integrity and beauty of the town hall. The upper floor of the town hall was formerly the meeting room of the noble lords of the court and local aldermen. From a window in the council chamber, the sworn court clerk or the local beadle informed the crowd waiting in front of the town hall of the orders and decrees of the court and the sentences and punishments pronounced on wrongdoers.

Rathaus