Accurate Prayer Times for Any City

A free online prayer times calculator (namaz timings, salah schedule). Uses your coordinates to compute the five daily prayer times plus sunrise, for today and the whole month. Pick from eight widely-used calculation methods (Muslim World League, ISNA, Egyptian Authority, Umm al-Qura, Karachi, Tehran, Jafari, Diyanet) and choose between Shafi and Hanafi Asr madhabs. A live countdown shows time left until the next prayer.

1
Set your location

Tap the location button or enter coordinates manually. Your location is used only inside your browser.

2
Choose a method

Select the calculation method that matches your local convention — Umm al-Qura for Saudi Arabia, ISNA for North America, Karachi for South Asia, etc.

3
Pick the Asr madhab

Shafi (and Maliki, Hanbali) use shadow factor 1. Hanafi uses shadow factor 2 — Asr is ~30–60 min later.

4
Read today's timings

All five prayer times are displayed as cards with a countdown highlighting the next prayer.

5
Browse the month

Scroll to the monthly table to see times for the next 30 days — useful for Ramadan planning.

Compute Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib and Isha for any location worldwide

Next prayer
Month calendar

Features

Five daily prayers + sunrise, imsak and Islamic midnight Eight calculation methods including Umm al-Qura, ISNA, MWL and Diyanet Asr madhab choice (Shafi/Maliki/Hanbali or Hanafi) — shadow factor 1× or 2× Live countdown to the next prayer updated every second Month-view table with all prayer times for the next 30 days
Who is this tool for?

Which calculation method should I use?

Use the method that your local masjid or Islamic authority follows. Common choices: Umm al-Qura (Saudi Arabia), ISNA (North America), Muslim World League (general), Karachi (Pakistan/India/Bangladesh), Diyanet (Turkey). All are based on astronomical calculations but differ slightly in Fajr/Isha angle or Maghrib delay.

What is the difference between Shafi and Hanafi Asr?

Shafi, Maliki and Hanbali madhabs hold Asr begins when the shadow of an object equals the object's height plus its noon shadow (factor 1). The Hanafi madhab holds it begins when the shadow equals twice the object's height plus its noon shadow (factor 2). The practical difference is that Hanafi Asr is typically 30–60 minutes later.

Why is my time off by a few minutes compared to my mosque?

Different calculation methods produce slightly different Fajr and Isha times (angles can differ by 1–3°, which translates to a few minutes). Also, some mosques add a safety buffer. This tool uses standard astronomical formulas without any buffer — results should match within ±3 minutes of authoritative sources like IslamicFinder or Aladhan.

Does this work in polar regions?

At very high latitudes (above ~48°) during summer, the sun may not dip far enough below the horizon for valid Fajr or Isha. This tool uses the "angle-based" approximation for those cases; consult your local scholars for the preferred high-latitude rule.

Are my coordinates sent anywhere?

No. All prayer time calculations happen inside your browser — coordinates are never transmitted.

💡 Want us to improve this tool just for you?

We can — and it's free! Just send us a quick message with your idea. If you'd like to discuss it in detail, leave your email and we'll get back to you. You can stay anonymous.

How do you rate this tool?

Thank you for your rating!
Want to share more? Leave a comment!
Thank you! Your comment will appear after moderation.
Published Updated