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17 Dhu al-Hijjah 1447 AH
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Casablanca

Prayer Times in Casablanca, Ain Sebaa-Hay Mohammedi

June 3, 202617 Dhu al-Hijjah, 1447 AH
Upcoming Prayer
Qiyam al-Layl
03:06 AM
04:01:38
Fajr
04:39 AM
Sunrise
06:21 AM
Dhuhr
01:28 PM
Asr
05:12 PM
Maghrib
08:36 PM
Isha
10:11 PM

⚠ Showing Custom — not this location's default Moroccan Ministry of Habous and Islamic Affairs. Reset to default

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Preview times under a different calculation method. The default for Morocco is Moroccan Ministry of Habous and Islamic Affairs.

Supplementary times

Imsak
04:29
Midnight
01:28
Qiyam al-Layl
03:06
Last third of night
Qibla
Qibla bearing: 93.7° from North (roughly E). 4,821 km to Makkah.

Accurate Casablanca Prayer Times, Ain Sebaa-Hay Mohammedi Morocco

Get precise prayer times in Casablanca, Ain Sebaa-Hay Mohammedi, Morocco, calculated using the Custom method with Standard (Shafi, Hanbali, Maliki) juristic calculation for Asr. Today's Fajr begins at 04:39 and Isha at 22:11. The fasting duration from Fajr to Maghrib is 15 hours 57 minutes.

Timezone & Coordinates

Casablanca is located in the Africa/Casablanca timezone (UTC +01:00), at latitude 33.5438 and longitude -7.5656. eSalah automatically adjusts for Daylight Saving Time.

🌖 Moon tonight in Casablanca

Full details →
Phase
Waning gibbous (89% illuminated)
Sunrise
06:20 AM
Sunset
08:36 PM
Moonrise
11:31 PM
Moonset
08:32 AM
Moonset lag after sunset −12 h 3 min

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

Moon age
18.1 days
Sun-moon elongation
141.2°

Casablanca is Morocco's largest city and economic centre, with a population of more than three million in the city proper and over four million in the wider metropolitan area. Its most prominent religious landmark is the Hassan II Mosque, completed in 1993 on a partly reclaimed seafront site, with the world's tallest minaret at 210 metres and capacity for 25,000 worshippers inside and a further 80,000 on its surrounding plaza. The mosque was financed largely by public subscription and incorporates Moroccan zellige tilework, hand-carved cedar ceilings, and travertine in a deliberately revivalist Maghrebi style. While the formal scholarly heritage of Morocco belongs to Fes — home of the al-Qarawiyyin university — Casablanca's network of neighbourhood mosques and the Moroccan Ministry of Habous and Islamic Affairs sustain a Maliki tradition of jurisprudence and the wider Maghrebi Sufi heritage that connects the city to Tlemcen, Tunis, and the Sahel.