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18 Dhu al-Hijjah 1447 AH
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Jerusalem

Prayer Times in Jerusalem, Yerushalayim

June 4, 202618 Dhu al-Hijjah, 1447 AH
Upcoming Prayer
Qiyam al-Layl
02:16 AM
02:45:42
Fajr
03:43 AM
Sunrise
05:34 AM
Dhuhr
12:37 PM
Asr
04:17 PM
Maghrib
07:41 PM
Isha
09:19 PM

⚠ Showing Kementerian Agama Republik Indonesia — not this location's default Egyptian General Authority of Survey (Bis). Reset to default

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Preview times under a different calculation method. The default for Palestine is Egyptian General Authority of Survey (Bis).

Supplementary times

Imsak
03:33
Midnight
00:37
Qiyam al-Layl
02:16
Last third of night
Qibla
Qibla bearing: 157.3° from North (roughly SSE). 1,239 km to Makkah.

Accurate Jerusalem Prayer Times, Yerushalayim Palestine

Get precise prayer times in Jerusalem, Yerushalayim, Palestine, calculated using the Kementerian Agama Republik Indonesia method with Standard (Shafi, Hanbali, Maliki) juristic calculation for Asr. Today's Fajr begins at 03:43 and Isha at 21:19. The fasting duration from Fajr to Maghrib is 15 hours 58 minutes.

Timezone & Coordinates

Jerusalem is located in the Asia/Beirut timezone (UTC +03:00), at latitude 31.7800 and longitude 35.2300. eSalah automatically adjusts for Daylight Saving Time.

🌖 Moon tonight in Jerusalem

Full details →
Phase
Waning gibbous (83% illuminated)
Sunrise
05:33 AM
Sunset
07:41 PM
Moonrise
11:08 PM
Moonset
08:38 AM
Moonset lag after sunset −11 h 3 min

The moon sets before the sun tonight — no crescent will be visible in the western sky after sunset.

Moon age
19.0 days
Sun-moon elongation
130.9°

Jerusalem — al-Quds in Arabic — is the third holiest city in Islam, revered as the destination of the Prophet Muhammad's miraculous Night Journey (Isra) and Ascension (Mi'raj) and as the original qibla before the direction of prayer was turned toward Mecca. Within the walled Old City stands the Haram al-Sharif, a vast esplanade housing the Dome of the Rock, completed by the Umayyad caliph Abd al-Malik in 691 CE as one of the earliest surviving monuments of Islamic architecture, and the congregational al-Aqsa Mosque, repeatedly rebuilt after earthquakes since the seventh century. Jerusalem flowered under the Umayyads, Ayyubids — under whom Salah al-Din restored Muslim governance in 1187 — and Mamluks, who endowed dozens of madrasas around the Haram. Today the city remains a place of daily Muslim worship, with congregational Friday prayers at al-Aqsa drawing tens of thousands, even as access and political conditions remain deeply contested.