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Ramadan Imsakiyah
The Imsakiyah is the daily timetable of fasting times for Ramadan — when suhoor must stop (Imsak) and when the fast is broken at Iftar. Below is the complete schedule for Ramadan 1,448 AH (2027); choose your city for accurate local Fajr and Maghrib times.
Mecca — Ramadan 1,448 AH (2027)
| Day |
Date |
Imsak (Suhoor ends) |
Fajr |
Iftar (Maghrib) |
| 1 | Mon, Feb 8 | 05:28 AM | 05:38 AM | 06:15 PM |
| 2 | Tue, Feb 9 | 05:27 AM | 05:37 AM | 06:15 PM |
| 3 | Wed, Feb 10 | 05:27 AM | 05:37 AM | 06:16 PM |
| 4 | Thu, Feb 11 | 05:26 AM | 05:36 AM | 06:16 PM |
| 5 | Fri, Feb 12 | 05:26 AM | 05:36 AM | 06:17 PM |
| 6 | Sat, Feb 13 | 05:25 AM | 05:35 AM | 06:17 PM |
| 7 | Sun, Feb 14 | 05:25 AM | 05:35 AM | 06:18 PM |
| 8 | Mon, Feb 15 | 05:24 AM | 05:34 AM | 06:18 PM |
| 9 | Tue, Feb 16 | 05:24 AM | 05:34 AM | 06:19 PM |
| 10 | Wed, Feb 17 | 05:23 AM | 05:33 AM | 06:19 PM |
| 11 | Thu, Feb 18 | 05:23 AM | 05:33 AM | 06:20 PM |
| 12 | Fri, Feb 19 | 05:22 AM | 05:32 AM | 06:20 PM |
| 13 | Sat, Feb 20 | 05:22 AM | 05:32 AM | 06:21 PM |
| 14 | Sun, Feb 21 | 05:21 AM | 05:31 AM | 06:21 PM |
| 15 | Mon, Feb 22 | 05:20 AM | 05:30 AM | 06:22 PM |
| 16 | Tue, Feb 23 | 05:20 AM | 05:30 AM | 06:22 PM |
| 17 | Wed, Feb 24 | 05:19 AM | 05:29 AM | 06:23 PM |
| 18 | Thu, Feb 25 | 05:18 AM | 05:28 AM | 06:23 PM |
| 19 | Fri, Feb 26 | 05:18 AM | 05:28 AM | 06:24 PM |
| 20 | Sat, Feb 27 | 05:17 AM | 05:27 AM | 06:24 PM |
| 21 | Sun, Feb 28 | 05:16 AM | 05:26 AM | 06:24 PM |
| 22 | Mon, Mar 1 | 05:15 AM | 05:25 AM | 06:25 PM |
| 23 | Tue, Mar 2 | 05:15 AM | 05:25 AM | 06:25 PM |
| 24 | Wed, Mar 3 | 05:14 AM | 05:24 AM | 06:26 PM |
| 25 | Thu, Mar 4 | 05:13 AM | 05:23 AM | 06:26 PM |
| 26 | Fri, Mar 5 | 05:12 AM | 05:22 AM | 06:26 PM |
| 27 | Sat, Mar 6 | 05:12 AM | 05:22 AM | 06:27 PM |
| 28 | Sun, Mar 7 | 05:11 AM | 05:21 AM | 06:27 PM |
| 29 | Mon, Mar 8 | 05:10 AM | 05:20 AM | 06:27 PM |
Times are estimates based on the selected calculation method and may differ by a few minutes from your local mosque. The first day of Ramadan can shift by a day depending on the moon sighting in your region.
About the Imsakiyah
- The Imsakiyah (إمساكية) is a Ramadan timetable that lists, for every day of the month, the moment to stop eating before dawn (Imsak) and the moment to break the fast at sunset (Iftar).
- Imsak is observed a few minutes before the Fajr (dawn) prayer as a precaution, so the suhoor meal ends comfortably before the fast begins. The fast itself starts at the true dawn (Fajr).
- Iftar begins at Maghrib, the sunset prayer, when it is time to break the fast. Many follow the Sunnah of breaking the fast with dates and water before praying.
- Times depend on your exact location and the calculation method used by local authorities, which sets the twilight angle for Fajr. This page lets you pick a city or use your device location and switch methods.
- Because the Hijri month follows the moon, the first day of Ramadan — and therefore the whole schedule — may begin a day earlier or later depending on the local moon sighting.
Frequently asked questions
- What is an Imsakiyah?
- An Imsakiyah is a Ramadan timetable showing, for each day, the time to stop the suhoor meal (Imsak) before dawn and the time to break the fast (Iftar) at sunset, along with the Fajr and Maghrib prayer times.
- What is the difference between Imsak and Fajr?
- Fajr is the start of the fast at true dawn. Imsak is a precautionary few minutes earlier when you should stop eating suhoor, so the fast is not broken by eating right up to Fajr. Most timetables set Imsak about ten minutes before Fajr.
- When is Iftar?
- Iftar is at Maghrib, the sunset prayer, when the fast is broken. It is recommended to break the fast promptly, following the Sunnah of dates and water.
- Are these times exactly right for my city?
- The times are calculated from your location and the chosen calculation method, so they are close estimates. They can differ by a few minutes from your local mosque, which may use a slightly different method or precaution. Always follow your local authority when in doubt.
- When does Ramadan start this year?
- The schedule above is generated for the next expected Ramadan. The exact first day depends on the sighting of the new moon and can vary by a day between regions and authorities.
- Can I get prayer and fasting times offline in Qurani?
- Yes. Qurani shows accurate prayer times, the Ramadan schedule, Qibla direction and the full Quran entirely offline — with no account and no ads — so you can rely on it anywhere during Ramadan.