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18 Dhu al-Hijjah 1447 AH
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Aleppo

Prayer Times in Aleppo, Halab

June 4, 202618 Dhu al-Hijjah, 1447 AH
Upcoming Prayer
Qiyam al-Layl
02:05 AM
03:29:31
Fajr
03:12 AM
Sunrise
05:15 AM
Dhuhr
12:30 PM
Asr
04:20 PM
Maghrib
07:45 PM
Isha
09:32 PM
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Preview times under a different calculation method. The default for Syria is Egyptian General Authority of Survey (Bis).

Supplementary times

Imsak
03:02
Midnight
00:30
Qiyam al-Layl
02:05
Last third of night
Qibla
Qibla bearing: 170.3° from North (roughly S). 1,664 km to Makkah.

Accurate Aleppo Prayer Times, Halab Syria

Get precise prayer times in Aleppo, Halab, Syria, calculated using the Egyptian General Authority of Survey (Bis) method with Standard (Shafi, Hanbali, Maliki) juristic calculation for Asr. Today's Fajr begins at 03:12 and Isha at 21:32. The fasting duration from Fajr to Maghrib is 16 hours 33 minutes.

Timezone & Coordinates

Aleppo is located in the Asia/Damascus timezone (UTC +03:00), at latitude 36.2028 and longitude 37.1586. eSalah automatically adjusts for Daylight Saving Time.

🌖 Moon tonight in Aleppo

Full details →
Phase
Waning gibbous (83% illuminated)
Sunrise
05:14 AM
Sunset
07:44 PM
Moonrise
11:11 PM
Moonset
08:17 AM
Moonset lag after sunset −11 h 27 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
131.3°

Aleppo is one of the longest continuously inhabited cities in the world and was a major node of Islamic learning, trade, and architecture from the Hamdanid emirate of the tenth century onward. Its Great Mosque, founded under the Umayyads and rebuilt by the Seljuks and Mamluks, was distinguished by an early-twelfth-century minaret that stood as one of the finest examples of medieval Syrian Islamic architecture until its destruction in 2013; restoration is ongoing. The Citadel of Aleppo, fortified by the Ayyubids, and the network of covered souks, khans, and madrasas around it made Aleppo a critical Mamluk and Ottoman commercial and scholarly hub for caravans linking Anatolia, Mesopotamia, and the Mediterranean. The city remains predominantly Muslim — Sunni majority with significant Alawi, Ismaili, and Christian communities — and despite the devastation of the 2012-2016 conflict, Friday prayers and Ramadan traditions continue, and reconstruction of damaged mosques is in progress.