Iftar in 2026 does not have one single fixed time; it depends on two things: the dates of Ramadan 1447 AH and your exact location each day of the month.

Quick scoop on “when is iftar 2026?”

  • Ramadan 2026 is expected to start for most communities around the evening of 17–19 February 2026 (depending on local moon sighting).
  • Iftar is every day at Maghrib (sunset) during Ramadan, so the time changes slightly day by day as daylight length shifts.
  • Typical fasting length in 2026 will be about 12–14 hours in many regions, meaning iftar will generally fall in the early evening (for example, around 17:20–18:15 in London in late February/early March, with times creeping later by mid‑March).
  • Because iftar is location‑based, you need a local timetable or app that calculates sunset for your city.

How to find your exact iftar time in 2026

Use one of these methods closer to Ramadan:

  1. Islamic calendar / timetable sites
    • Sites like Aladhan and various charity or mosque timetables offer Ramadan 2026 calendars where you select your city and see daily Maghrib (iftar) times for the whole month.
  1. Local mosque / Islamic centre
    • Many mosques publish a PDF or printed Ramadan timetable listing Suhoor (Fajr cut‑off) and Iftar (Maghrib) times for all 29–30 days.
  1. Muslim apps
    • Prayer‑time apps and Ramadan planners provide automatic Iftar alerts that adjust to your GPS location and date, so you always break fast exactly at local Maghrib.

Simple example

If you were in a GMT‑based city on 1 Ramadan 1447 (around 18 February 2026), a sample timetable shows Maghrib near 17:20–17:25 , and by the end of Ramadan it moves to roughly 18:10–18:15 , reflecting longer days.

Small HTML table: example pattern (GMT‑based sample city, Ramadan 2026)

html

<table>
  <thead>
    <tr>
      <th>Date (2026)</th>
      <th>Ramadan day</th>
      <th>Approx. Iftar (Maghrib)</th>
    </tr>
  </thead>
  <tbody>
    <tr>
      <td>18 Feb</td>
      <td>1</td>
      <td>17:21</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>23 Feb</td>
      <td>6</td>
      <td>17:30</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>1 Mar</td>
      <td>12</td>
      <td>17:40</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>10 Mar</td>
      <td>21</td>
      <td>17:56</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>19 Mar</td>
      <td>30</td>
      <td>18:12</td>
    </tr>
  </tbody>
</table>

These are example GMT‑based times to show how iftar gradually shifts later; you still need a city‑specific timetable for precise minutes.

Bottom note: Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.