If you can, let 4:55 AM shape the beginning and 4:43 PM become the evening review point.
Open reflectionsDoha prayer times for December 2037
A crawlable monthly schedule for Fajr, sunrise, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha in Qatar, with Hijri dates and city links for local planning.

Monthly planning by city
December 2037
December 2037
A compact weekly rhythm from the monthly planning board.
Need tonight's night prayer window? View Tahajjud time for Doha.
This month at a glance
Next 7 days focus
First 7 daysDecember 2037
Helpful context
How to use monthly planning
About the monthly prayer timetable
This board shows Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha across December 2037.
That makes it easier to plan work, school, travel, and mosque visits while noticing day-to-day timing movement.
Sunrise and Hijri context stay visible too, so the page works as a planning surface rather than a plain list of times.
Why the full month matters
Seeing the month as one sequence makes Fajr shifts, Maghrib movement, and weekend rhythm easier to spot.
That helps before Ramadan, during early work schedules, or when you are planning around one Qatar city repeatedly.
How to use the city links
Use the city links when you want the live daily page for a specific place.
Then come back to the monthly board when you want to compare dates or plan the coming week.
That pattern is helpful when one city matters today, but the next few days still need a wider monthly view.
FAQ
Monthly timetable FAQ
Is this monthly timetable specific to Qatar?
Yes. It presents a monthly Qatar prayer schedule with Doha as the main anchor and city links for local follow-up.
Can I use it for daily planning?
Yes. It is useful for planning, while the local mosque remains the final reference for congregation, iqamah, and Jumu'ah details.
Why include links to city pages?
They let you move from broad monthly planning to the live daily page for the city you need right now.
Do month and year query URLs share one canonical version?
Yes. Query views now point back to the main /monthly canonical path to reduce duplicate indexing signals.
Clearer planning
How to use monthly planning
About the monthly prayer timetable
This board shows Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha across December 2037.
That makes it easier to plan work, school, travel, and mosque visits while noticing day-to-day timing movement.
Sunrise and Hijri context stay visible too, so the page works as a planning surface rather than a plain list of times.
Why the full month matters
Seeing the month as one sequence makes Fajr shifts, Maghrib movement, and weekend rhythm easier to spot.
That helps before Ramadan, during early work schedules, or when you are planning around one Qatar city repeatedly.
How to use the city links
Use the city links when you want the live daily page for a specific place.
Then come back to the monthly board when you want to compare dates or plan the coming week.
That pattern is helpful when one city matters today, but the next few days still need a wider monthly view.
Clearer planning
How to use monthly planning
December 2037
Watch Fajr, Maghrib, and the rest of the prayers move inside one readable month.
Hijri and city links
Keep Hijri context and Qatar city routes inside the same planning flow.
Upcoming days
Return to the monthly board when you need more than one day before planning work or travel.
Clearer planning
More monthly planning questions
Is this monthly timetable specific to Qatar?
Yes. It presents a monthly Qatar prayer schedule with Doha as the main anchor and city links for local follow-up.
Can I use it for daily planning?
Yes. It is useful for planning, while the local mosque remains the final reference for congregation, iqamah, and Jumu'ah details.
Why include links to city pages?
They let you move from broad monthly planning to the live daily page for the city you need right now.
Do month and year query URLs share one canonical version?
Yes. Query views now point back to the main /monthly canonical path to reduce duplicate indexing signals.
Calendar guide
How to use the monthly prayer calendar
Reading the month clearly
The monthly calendar helps you compare prayer times across many days instead of relying only on today's table.
Use Fajr and Maghrib for morning and sunset planning, then scan Dhuhr, Asr, and Isha to shape the rest of the day.
Why times shift across the month
Prayer times move because daylight and night length change gradually, so Fajr, Maghrib, and the other prayers shift from day to day.
This helps when you are planning work, travel, visits, or tracking how Fajr and Maghrib change through the week.
Calendar guide
Monthly prayer calendar FAQ
When should I use the monthly timetable?
Use it when you need more than one day or want to watch times change through the week and month.
Are Fajr and Maghrib especially important in Ramadan?
Yes. They shape suhoor and iftar, so checking them before each day is useful.
Do times differ between cities?
Small differences can appear, which is why city links help you reach the local page.
Does the calendar replace today's table?
No. The calendar is for wider planning, while today's table is best for the immediate answer.