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20 Dhu al-Hijjah 1447 AH
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Fez

Prayer Times in Fez, Fes-Meknes

June 6, 202620 Dhu al-Hijjah, 1447 AH
Upcoming Prayer
Dhuhr
01:19 PM
07:34:32
Fajr
04:25 AM
Sunrise
06:09 AM
Asr
05:04 PM
Maghrib
08:29 PM
Isha
10:05 PM

⚠ Showing Muslim World League — 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
04:15
Midnight
01:19
Qiyam al-Layl
02:55
Last third of night
Qibla
Qibla bearing: 95.8° from North (roughly E). 4,589 km to Makkah.

Accurate Fez Prayer Times, Fes-Meknes Morocco

Get precise prayer times in Fez, Fes-Meknes, Morocco, calculated using the Muslim World League method with Standard (Shafi, Hanbali, Maliki) juristic calculation for Asr. Today's Fajr begins at 04:25 and Isha at 22:05. The fasting duration from Fajr to Maghrib is 16 hours 4 minutes.

Timezone & Coordinates

Fez is located in the Africa/Casablanca timezone (UTC +01:00), at latitude 34.0568 and longitude -4.9943. eSalah automatically adjusts for Daylight Saving Time.

🌖 Moon tonight in Fez

Full details →
Phase
Waning gibbous (72% illuminated)
Sunrise
06:08 AM
Sunset
08:28 PM
Moonrise
12:58 AM
Moonset
11:19 AM
Moonset lag after sunset −9 h 9 min

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

Moon age
20.4 days
Sun-moon elongation
115.8°

Fez was founded by the Idrisid dynasty in the late eighth and early ninth centuries CE and became the principal religious and intellectual capital of Morocco. The al-Qarawiyyin Mosque, established in 859 CE by Fatima al-Fihri and substantially expanded under the Almoravids in the twelfth century, is among the oldest continuously operating institutions of higher learning in the world; it taught generations of Maliki jurists, including for a time the historian Ibn Khaldun. The Andalusiyyin Mosque, founded in the same generation by al-Fihri's sister Maryam, anchors the eastern bank of the Fez river. The fourteenth-century Marinid madrasas — Bou Inania, Attarine, and Sahrij — are masterpieces of carved cedar, stucco, and zellige tile representing the high point of Maghribi-Andalusi religious architecture. Fez today retains an active al-Qarawiyyin, multiple Sufi tariqa houses including the Tijaniyya, and a deeply observant traditional mosque culture in its UNESCO-protected medina.