Prayer Times in Madinah
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- Jafari — Ithna Ashari
- University of Islamic Sciences, Karachi
- Islamic Society of North America
- Muslim World League
- Umm al-Qura, Makkah
- Egyptian General Authority of Survey
- Custom
- University of Tehran — Institute of Geophysics
- Algerian Ministry of Religious Affairs
- Gulf 90 Minutes Fixed Isha
- Egyptian General Authority of Survey (Bis)
- UOIF — France
- Sistem Informasi Hisab Rukyat Indonesia
- Diyanet İşleri Başkanlığı, Turkey
- Germany Custom
- Russia Custom
- Kuwait Ministry of Awqaf
- Tunisian Ministry of Religious Affairs
- London Unified Prayer Times
- Majlis Ugama Islam Singapura
- World Islamic Mission (Oslo)
- Moonsighting Committee Worldwide
- Jordan Ministry of Awqaf
- Jabatan Kemajuan Islam Malaysia
- Kementerian Agama Republik Indonesia
- Moroccan Ministry of Habous and Islamic Affairs
- Dubai (experimental per Aladhan)
- Comunidade Islâmica de Lisboa
- Qatar (Ministry of Awqaf)
Supplementary times
Accurate Madinah Prayer Times, Saudi Arabia
Get precise prayer times in Madinah, Saudi Arabia, Saudi Arabia, calculated using the University of Islamic Sciences, Karachi method with Standard (Shafi, Hanbali, Maliki) juristic calculation for Asr. Today's Fajr begins at 04:31 and Isha at 20:08. The fasting duration from Fajr to Maghrib is 14 hours 17 minutes.
Timezone & Coordinates
Madinah is located in the Asia/Riyadh timezone (UTC +03:00), at latitude 24.4686 and longitude 39.6142. eSalah automatically adjusts for Daylight Saving Time.
Medina, originally Yathrib, is the city to which the Prophet Muhammad migrated in 622 CE — the Hijra that marks the start of the Islamic calendar — and where the first Muslim polity was established. It is the burial place of the Prophet, whose tomb lies beneath the green dome of Al-Masjid an-Nabawi, the Prophet's Mosque, expanded over fourteen centuries from a simple palm-trunk enclosure into one of the largest mosques on earth. The first two caliphs, Abu Bakr and Umar, are buried alongside him; the nearby Quba Mosque is traditionally identified as the first mosque built in Islam. Medina's classical role as the cradle of the early Muslim community, the codification of prophetic Sunnah, and the formation of the Maliki legal school still shapes its religious life today, where pilgrims combine visits to the Rawdah with study circles in the Haram and the city retains a deeply observant, scholarly character.