What Ramadan timings matter most in Doha?
Fajr for fasting start, Maghrib for iftar, and the daily prayer page for the full rhythm.
A focused Ramadan hub that connects suhoor, iftar, daily prayer times, and the monthly timetable for Doha.
Fajr for fasting start, Maghrib for iftar, and the daily prayer page for the full rhythm.
Use the monthly timetable together with the Doha prayer page for month-level planning.
Yes. Fajr marks the fasting start and Maghrib marks iftar.
Ramadan context
This page helps you move quickly between suhoor, Fajr, iftar, Maghrib, and Doha's daily prayer timings.
When you need a wider view, open the monthly board or the full Doha prayer-times page.
Ramadan context
Doha
This page keeps Ramadan planning tied to Doha's daily timings.
At Maghrib
Open the daily prayer page when you need a direct Maghrib check.
Monthly board
Return to monthly planning when you want to compare several Ramadan days.
Ramadan context
Fajr for fasting start, Maghrib for iftar, and the daily prayer page for the full rhythm.
Use the monthly timetable together with the Doha prayer page for month-level planning.
Yes. Fajr marks the fasting start and Maghrib marks iftar.
Calendar guide
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.
Prayer times move because daylight and night length change gradually, so Fajr, Maghrib, and the other prayers shift from day to day.
During Ramadan, this matters for suhoor and iftar because Fajr and Maghrib minutes directly shape the daily plan.
Calendar guide
Use it when you need more than one day or want to watch times change through the week and month.
Yes. They shape suhoor and iftar, so checking them before each day is useful.
Small differences can appear, which is why city links help you reach the local page.
No. The calendar is for wider planning, while today's table is best for the immediate answer.