Today is the 3rd Roza of Ramadan 1447 AH in Karachi. All timings above are for Fiqa Hanafi and include a standard 1-minute preventive adjustment — Sehri is shown 1 minute earlier than the Fajr calculation, and Iftar is given 1 minute after the observed sunset. This cautionary buffer ensures that no fast is broken before the permissible time. Always confirm with your local mosque or neighbourhood masjid for the most precise timing.
When the crescent moon rises over the Arabian Sea — as it did on the evening of Wednesday, 18 February 2026 — Karachi doesn't simply begin a month of fasting. The entire city changes its personality. Pakistan's most populous metropolis, home to over 20 million people, takes on a spirit that can only be described as electric and deeply sacred at once.
With Ramadan 2026 falling in the tail end of Karachi's winter season, the weather is nothing short of ideal. Expect cool, refreshing nights for Sehri and Taraweeh, and pleasantly mild days that make fasting far more comfortable than the gruelling summer Ramadans Karachiites have endured in recent years. This year's Ramzan is a gift of weather as much as it is a gift of spirit.
Ramadan 2026 in Karachi spans 30 days, from 19 February through 20 March 2026, with Eid ul-Fitr 2026 anticipated on 20 or 21 March, subject to official moon sighting confirmation.
Every Karachiite knows the ritual well. All eyes turn to the Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee at the Met Complex as scholars, astronomers, and citizens await the official announcement. When the moon is confirmed, the city "wakes up" — not just figuratively, but literally. Markets like Tariq Road and Saddar remain illuminated and active until the first Sehri of Ramadan, and the lights at Memoon Masjid are switched on as a beloved signal that the holy month has officially arrived.
The Islamic calendar is 10 to 12 days shorter than the Gregorian calendar, which means Iftar time in Karachi shifts each year. The Ramadan calendar 2026 serves as an essential daily reference for millions of Karachiites to track their Roza timings, plan meals, and organise their spiritual schedule across the full month.
The table below is the complete Karachi Ramadan 2026 calendar for all 30 fasting days. All times are for Fiqa Hanafi with the 1-minute preventive adjustment applied. Please verify with your nearest mosque for confirmation.
| Roza # | Date (2026) | Sehri Ends | Iftar Begins | Fast Duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 19 Feb | 05:46 AM | 6:29 PM | 12 h 43 m |
| 2 | 20 Feb | 05:45 AM | 6:30 PM | 12 h 45 m |
| 3 | 21 Feb Today | 05:45 AM | 6:30 PM | 12 h 45 m |
| 4 | 22 Feb | 05:44 AM | 6:31 PM | 12 h 47 m |
| 5 | 23 Feb | 05:43 AM | 6:32 PM | 12 h 49 m |
| 6 | 24 Feb | 05:42 AM | 6:32 PM | 12 h 50 m |
| 7 | 25 Feb | 05:41 AM | 6:33 PM | 12 h 52 m |
| 8 | 26 Feb | 05:40 AM | 6:33 PM | 12 h 53 m |
| 9 | 27 Feb | 05:40 AM | 6:34 PM | 12 h 54 m |
| 10 | 28 Feb | 05:39 AM | 6:34 PM | 12 h 55 m |
| 11 | 01 Mar | 05:38 AM | 6:35 PM | 12 h 57 m |
| 12 | 02 Mar | 05:37 AM | 6:35 PM | 12 h 58 m |
| 13 | 03 Mar | 05:36 AM | 6:36 PM | 13 h 00 m |
| 14 | 04 Mar | 05:35 AM | 6:36 PM | 13 h 01 m |
| 15 | 05 Mar | 05:34 AM | 6:37 PM | 13 h 03 m |
| 16 | 06 Mar | 05:33 AM | 6:37 PM | 13 h 04 m |
| 17 | 07 Mar | 05:32 AM | 6:38 PM | 13 h 06 m |
| 18 | 08 Mar | 05:31 AM | 6:38 PM | 13 h 07 m |
| 19 | 09 Mar | 05:30 AM | 6:39 PM | 13 h 09 m |
| 20 | 10 Mar | 05:30 AM | 6:39 PM | 13 h 09 m |
| 21 | 11 Mar | 05:29 AM | 6:40 PM | 13 h 11 m |
| 22 | 12 Mar | 05:28 AM | 6:40 PM | 13 h 12 m |
| 23 | 13 Mar | 05:27 AM | 6:41 PM | 13 h 14 m |
| 24 | 14 Mar | 05:25 AM | 6:41 PM | 13 h 16 m |
| 25 | 15 Mar | 05:24 AM | 6:42 PM | 13 h 18 m |
| 26 | 16 Mar | 05:23 AM | 6:42 PM | 13 h 19 m |
| 27 | 17 Mar | 05:22 AM | 6:43 PM | 13 h 21 m |
| 28 | 18 Mar | 05:21 AM | 6:43 PM | 13 h 22 m |
| 29 | 19 Mar | 05:20 AM | 6:43 PM | 13 h 23 m |
| 30 | 20 Mar | 05:19 AM | 6:44 PM | 13 h 25 m |
All timings are for Fiqa Hanafi with a 1-minute preventive adjustment (Sehri −1 min, Iftar +1 min). Fiqa Jafria (Shia) Sehri is approximately 10 minutes earlier and Iftar 10 minutes later. Timings are derived via spherical trigonometry based on Karachi's geographic coordinates and atmospheric refraction. Please confirm with your nearest mosque for precise local timings.
Sehri in Karachi is unlike anywhere else in Pakistan. As the city's famous siren blares across neighbourhoods — from North Karachi and Gulshan-e-Iqbal to Defence and Korangi — followed by the Fajr Adhan echoing from thousands of mosques, the entire metropolis stirs back to life in the quiet pre-dawn hours.
Karachiites are known for their love of a heavy, satisfying Sehri. Popular choices include:
Because Karachi never truly sleeps, late-night cafes and dhabas across Sea View, Boat Basin, and North Nazimabad stay open through the night during Ramadan, serving Sehri until the very last minute.
Iftar time in Karachi is one of the most extraordinary moments in any Pakistani city. For those few precious minutes before the Maghrib Adhan sounds — and then for the ten minutes of sacred silence that follow as the entire city simultaneously breaks its fast — Karachi becomes remarkably, beautifully still. It is a rare sight in a city that is otherwise in perpetual motion.
From the Clifton waterfront to Nazimabad, from Saddar to Landhi, Karachiites gather with dates and water to open their fast together. The Iftar table in Karachi is a celebration of the city's extraordinary food culture:
Karachi is Pakistan's undisputed food capital, and Ramadan is when the city's culinary world truly comes alive. Every neighbourhood transforms its evening atmosphere into a vibrant open-air food festival from mid-afternoon through midnight.
After Iftar and a brief rest, the mosques become the true heart of Karachi during Ramadan. Taraweeh prayers fill every masjid in the city to capacity, and for the last ten nights — especially Shab-e-Qadr — the spiritual intensity reaches its peak. Here are Karachi's most celebrated masjids for Taraweeh in 2026:
Famous for its stunning single-dome architecture and incredible acoustics — a deeply spiritual Taraweeh experience
Massive congregation hub where thousands gather for Taraweeh and daily community service throughout Ramadan
Always packed and especially popular for those seeking swift Quran completion in Taraweeh during the holy month
Worth the drive for Shab-e-Qadr and the last ten nights — widely considered one of Karachi's most spectacular Taraweeh venues
If Karachi is known for one Ramadan tradition above all others, it is the sheer scale and generosity of its roadside Dastarkhwans — the free community Iftar tables that stretch for miles along the city's major arteries. Drive down Shahrah-e-Faisal, University Road, or through Nishtar Park in the final hour before sunset and you will witness thousands of volunteers rushing to lay out mats, set up tables, and prepare food for whoever arrives — regardless of background or income.
The result is extraordinary: no one in Karachi is left without Iftar when the siren sounds. From the business executive to the daily-wage labourer, from the local resident to the passing traveller — everyone eats together. This is the true spirit of Ramadan made visible on the streets of Karachi.
Karachiites have long been recognised as among the most charitable people anywhere in the world — and Ramadan amplifies this generosity to extraordinary levels. With the cost of living placing pressure on millions of families in 2026, giving Zakat early in Ramadan helps those in need prepare adequately for Eid.
The Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) was known to be the most generous person, and his generosity increased manifold during Ramadan. On the special nights of the last Ashra, he (PBUH) reminded his companions:
"Search for the Night of Qadr in the odd nights of the last ten days of Ramadan."
— Sahih al-Bukhari: 2017Karachi's major welfare organisations — Saylani, JDC, Edhi Foundation, Alkhidmat, and countless mosques and community groups — all accept Zakat and Sadaqah during Ramadan and ensure it reaches the most deserving recipients across the city and beyond.
Follow Admin for daily Ramadan timings, real estate insights, and community news from across Pakistan throughout the blessed month of Ramzan 2026. Ramadan Mubarak!
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