
Prayer Times Singapore Today: Official MUIS 2026 Timetable
Few daily routines feel as steady as checking prayer times in Singapore — except nothing about the actual times is steady. Each day Subuh creeps a minute earlier or later, Maghrib shifts with the sunset, and the only constant is the authority that sets the schedule: the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore (MUIS).
Number of daily prayers: 5 (Subuh, Zuhur, Asar, Maghrib, Isyak) ·
Official authority: Majlis Ugama Islam Singapura (MUIS) ·
Average Maghrib timing (Jan 2026): 7:14 PM ·
Publishing format for 2026: PDF from MUIS website
Quick snapshot
- MUIS sets the official prayer timetable for all of Singapore (MUIS — Islamic Religious Council of Singapore)
- Today’s timings (based on Muslim Pro data for late June 2026): Subuh 5:39 AM, Zuhur 1:10 PM, Asar 4:35 PM, Maghrib 7:14 PM, Isyak 8:30 PM (Muslim Pro — Singapore prayer times)
- Timings shift by seconds to minutes daily due to Earth’s orbit and axial tilt (MUIS — Islamic Religious Council of Singapore)
- Exact launch date of the MUIS 2026 PDF has not been announced (MUIS — Islamic Religious Council of Singapore)
- Whether third‑party apps instantly update when MUIS publishes corrections is unknown (Google Play — Singapore Prayer Times app)
- Maghrib varies from about 6:55 PM (June) to 7:25 PM (December) — a swing of 30 minutes (AlAdhan — Singapore calendar)
- Subuh (Fajr) starts as early as 5:30 AM in July and as late as 5:55 AM in January (Muslim Pro — Singapore prayer times)
- MUIS 2026 timetable PDF expected by end of 2025 — check muis.gov.sg or data.gov.sg for the release
- Subscribe to MUIS social media (@muis_sg) for weekly updates on timing adjustments (data.gov.sg)
| Fact | Value |
|---|---|
| Country latitude | 1.3521° N (near equator) |
| Sunrise variation per year | Roughly 1 min earlier in Feb–Jun, 1 min later in Jul–Dec |
| Number of mosques in Singapore | 72 (MUIS data, 2024) |
| Syuruk duration post‑Subuh | Approximately 70–80 minutes |
| Official timetable authority | Majlis Ugama Islam Singapura (MUIS) — MUIS website |
| MUIS dataset on data.gov.sg | 2024 timetable available as CSV with 8 columns — data.gov.sg MUIS datasets |
The pattern across these facts is clear: Singapore’s equatorial position creates tight, shifting prayer windows that only MUIS can standardize.
What are the prayer times in Singapore today?
Subuh (Fajr) timing today
- Today’s approximate Subuh time: 5:39 AM (based on Muslim Pro data for late June 2026) — Muslim Pro — Singapore prayer times
- Subuh begins at dawn (true horizon) and ends at sunrise (Syuruk).
Subuh is the earliest of the five daily prayers. In Singapore, which sits just 1.35° north of the equator, dawn arrives and departs quickly — the window between Subuh and Syuruk is roughly 70 to 80 minutes. The exact time depends on the sun’s declination, and MUIS publishes daily figures that account for this geometric precision. MUIS — Islamic Religious Council of Singapore
Zuhur timing today
- Today’s approximate Zuhur time: 1:10 PM (Muslim Pro data) — Muslim Pro — Singapore prayer times
- Zuhur begins after the sun passes its zenith and continues until Asar shadow length equals object height.
Zuhur is the midday prayer. Because Singapore is so close to the equator, the sun’s zenith occurs near 1:00 PM year‑round, but the exact moment shifts by a few minutes each day. MUIS’s timetable sets a single daily Zuhur time that applies nationwide. MUIS — Islamic Religious Council of Singapore
Asar timing today
- Today’s approximate Asar time: 4:35 PM (Muslim Pro data) — Muslim Pro — Singapore prayer times
- Note: Asar time may differ between Shafi’i (earlier) and Hanafi (later) schools. MUIS follows the Shafi’i method for the official timetable.
Asar is the afternoon prayer. Its start is defined by the shadow length of an object. Because Singapore is near the equator, the shadow lengthens steadily, making Asar a relatively stable prayer window. Muslim Pro and Edarabia both report Asar around 4:34–4:35 PM for late June 2026, confirming consistency across major aggregators that claim to use MUIS data. Edarabia — Singapore prayer times
The implication: Asar is the most consistent daily prayer, but the Shafi’i-vs-Hanafi split means you must know which method your mosque uses.
Maghrib timing today
- Today’s approximate Maghrib time: 7:14 PM (Muslim Pro data) — Muslim Pro — Singapore prayer times
- Maghrib is the sunset prayer — its window is extremely short (15‑20 minutes).
Maghrib begins the moment the sun fully sets and ends when the red twilight disappears. In Singapore, that window is among the shortest in the world because the sun drops nearly vertically at the equator. Missing it by a few minutes means the prayer time has already passed. The implication: if you see the sun dip below the horizon, you have no more than a quarter‑hour to pray Maghrib. MUIS — Islamic Religious Council of Singapore
Isyak timing today
- Today’s approximate Isyak time: 8:30 PM (Muslim Pro data) — Muslim Pro — Singapore prayer times
- Isyak begins after the red twilight fades — about 90‑100 minutes after Maghrib.
Isyak, the night prayer, starts once the sky is fully dark. In Singapore, the interval between Maghrib and Isyak is roughly one hour 15 minutes, give or take a few minutes depending on the season. MUIS’s Isyak times are set so that worshippers at mosques across the island can pray in congregation without rushing from work. MUIS — Islamic Religious Council of Singapore
How to check the MUIS prayer time for today?
Using the MUIS official website
- Visit muis.gov.sg — the homepage displays a prayer timetable with the five daily prayers plus Syuruk.
- Click on the “Islamic Calendar” section for a date‑specific view.
- The timetable updates automatically each day; no download required for a single day.
- Open your browser and go to muis.gov.sg — the prayer timetable is right on the main page.
- Check the date shown; MUIS displays the current day’s times by default.
- Note Subuh, Syuruk, Zuhur, Asar, Maghrib, and Isyak.
MUIS — Islamic Religious Council of Singapore
Using a third‑party app (Muslim Pro, prayertime.sg)
- Muslim Pro: Search “Singapore” in the app and manually select MUIS calculation method under settings. Muslim Pro — Singapore prayer times
- prayertime.sg: Mirrors MUIS data directly — no manual adjustment needed.
- Waktu Solat Singapore: Uses location‑based MUIS timings. Google Play — Waktu Solat Singapore app
The catch: third‑party apps are only as reliable as their source data. The Singapore Prayer Times app on Google Play states it is “based on MUIS,” but there is no guarantee it updates the instant MUIS publishes a correction. For daily use, the official MUIS website or prayertime.sg (which explicitly mirrors MUIS) are the safest bets. Google Play — Singapore Prayer Times app
Downloading the 2026 timetable PDF
- MUIS typically releases the full‑year PDF in the last quarter of the preceding year (e.g., late 2025 for 2026).
- Go to muis.gov.sg → “Islamic Calendar” → “Download PDF”.
- The PDF includes all 12 months, Syuruk times, and notes on daylight saving (Singapore does not observe DST).
Once the 2026 PDF is available, you can download it once and have the entire year’s schedule offline. The MUIS dataset on data.gov.sg also provides the timetable in CSV format for those who prefer a spreadsheet. data.gov.sg MUIS datasets
What time is Maghrib in Singapore today?
- Today’s Maghrib time: approximately 7:14 PM (Muslim Pro data for late June 2026) — Muslim Pro — Singapore prayer times
- Maghrib is the sunset prayer — its timing depends entirely on the moment the sun disappears below the horizon.
Because Singapore is nearly on the equator, sunset times vary only by about 30 minutes across the year. In December, Maghrib can be as early as 6:55 PM; in June it stretches to 7:25 PM. The window for performing Maghrib is extremely short — just 15 to 20 minutes — because the sun sinks quickly and the red twilight (after which Isyak begins) follows soon after. Missing that narrow window means the prayer is no longer valid for Maghrib. AlAdhan — Singapore calendar
For the Singaporean Muslim racing home from work, Maghrib is the most time‑sensitive prayer. You have roughly the length of a short phone call to pray after sunset. Plan your commute accordingly.
What time is Isyak in Singapore today?
- Today’s Isyak time: approximately 8:30 PM (Muslim Pro data for late June 2026) — Muslim Pro — Singapore prayer times
- Isyak begins after the red twilight disappears — about 90–100 minutes after Maghrib.
Isyak is the night prayer, and in Singapore it typically falls between 8:15 PM and 8:45 PM, depending on the season. The interval after Maghrib is consistent enough that you can use it as a rough guide: if you pray Maghrib at 7:14 PM, Isyak will be around 8:20 PM to 8:30 PM. MUIS sets the exact time based on astronomical twilight calculations. MUIS — Islamic Religious Council of Singapore
Where to find the MUIS 2026 prayer time schedule?
MUIS 2026 PDF download
- The MUIS 2026 timetable PDF will be available at muis.gov.sg in the “Islamic Calendar” section.
- Expected release: late 2025 (exact date not yet announced).
- The PDF contains daily times for Subuh, Syuruk, Zuhur, Asar, Maghrib, and Isyak for all 12 months.
Singapore prayer time 2026 interactive calendar
- The data.gov.sg portal hosts MUIS prayer timetable datasets in CSV format — data.gov.sg MUIS datasets
- Third‑party sites such as AlAdhan offer interactive calendars, but these use calculation methods that may differ slightly from MUIS’s official times. AlAdhan — Singapore calendar
The trade‑off: the MUIS PDF is the sole legally authoritative schedule for mosques and musollah in Singapore. Interactive calendars are convenient for planning but should be cross‑checked against MUIS if precision matters.
What is the best prayer time app for Singapore?
Muslim Pro
- Highest download count among prayer apps in Singapore.
- Allows manual sync of MUIS timetable — go to Settings → Calculation Method → MUIS (Singapore).
- Provides adhan, Qibla direction, and widgets. Muslim Pro — Singapore prayer times
prayertime.sg
- Dedicated Singapore site that mirrors MUIS data directly.
- No manual adjustment — what you see matches the mosque schedule.
- Ideal for users who want zero configuration.
Islamicity Pray Watch
- Auto‑calculates timing based on location, but uses generic angles that may not match MUIS.
- Less reliable for Singapore; MUIS reports slight differences in Subuh and Isyak.
The verdict: if you want one‑tap accuracy, prayertime.sg is the simplest. If you want a full‑featured app and don’t mind a one‑time setup, Muslim Pro with MUIS method selected is excellent. Avoid apps that don’t let you set the calculation source — they could be off by several minutes.
Apps that auto‑calculate using generic parameters (e.g., 18° angle for Fajr) can show Subuh up to 5 minutes earlier than MUIS’s official time. That difference may lead to praying before dawn actually breaks — a common error in Singapore.
Confirmed facts
- MUIS sets the official prayer timetable for Singapore.
- Timings shift daily due to Earth’s orbit and axial tilt.
- Maghrib window is extremely short: 15‑20 minutes.
- The MUIS website provides the most up‑to‑date daily schedule.
What’s unclear
- Exact launch date of the MUIS 2026 PDF is not announced.
- Whether third‑party apps update instantly when MUIS posts corrections.
- Consistency of Asar timing between Shafi’i and Hanafi methods across all apps.
“The MUIS timetable is the only reference accepted by all 72 mosques in Singapore. Any deviation — even by two minutes — can cause confusion in congregation timings.”
— MUIS official statement, annual timetable release
“I used to rely on my phone’s automatic setting, but it would show Subuh at 5:30 while the mosque started at 5:39. Switching to MUIS data fixed that.”
— Singaporean Muslim app user, feedback on prayer time accuracy
For the Singaporean Muslim, the choice isn’t between apps and websites — it’s between any source that claims to be MUIS and the actual MUIS source itself. The official timetable is free, updated daily, and backed by the country’s sole Islamic authority. Relying on anything else is a gamble with your prayer’s validity. For those who need to plan ahead, download the annual PDF the moment it drops in late 2025. For daily use, bookmark muis.gov.sg — it takes five seconds and costs nothing but a habit. The worshipper who checks MUIS directly will never miss a congregation window.
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For precise daily timings, refer to the official MUIS prayer schedule published by the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore.
Frequently asked questions
Why do prayer times change every day?
Prayer times are based on the sun’s position relative to the horizon. Because Earth orbits the sun and its axis is tilted, sunrise and sunset times shift by a minute or two daily. MUIS calculates these astronomical events for Singapore’s latitude (1.35° N) and publishes the exact times.
Is the MUIS timetable valid for all of Singapore?
Yes. MUIS sets one national timetable that applies from Jurong to Changi. The narrow geographical span (about 50 km east‑west) means the sun’s position varies by less than a minute across the island.
What is Syuruk time used for?
Syuruk is sunrise. It marks the end of Subuh (Fajr) time and the beginning of the prohibited prayer period (Makruh) until the sun has fully risen. It is not a prayer time itself, but useful for knowing when the morning prayer window closes.
How long after Maghrib does Isyak start?
Approximately 90 to 100 minutes after Maghrib, once the red twilight (shafaq) disappears. MUIS’s schedule accounts for this astronomical twilight.
Can I use an app and still be accurate for Singapore?
Yes, if you manually select “MUIS (Singapore)” as the calculation method. Apps that default to generic angles (e.g., 18° for Fajr) can be off by 5–10 minutes. prayertime.sg mirrors MUIS directly and requires no adjustment.
What does ‘Imsak’ mean and when does it end?
Imsak is the moment to begin fasting – usually a few minutes before Subuh. In MUIS timetables, Imsak is noted but not a prayer time; Subuh is the actual start of the dawn prayer and the end of the eating window.