Live — the call follows the sun
Somewhere on Earth, it is always time to pray.
The Adhan is being called in many places right now
As the sun sets in one city it rises in another, and the call is taken up again — without pause, all day, every day.
Called in the last minutes
A live reading, calculated from the sun over cities worldwide. Point at a place to read it.
Your location — today
Your prayer times & next-prayer countdown
Set your location to see accurate prayer times and a countdown to the next call.
Sends your IP to a third-party service once, to estimate your city.
Your location stays in your browser. It is never sent to a server.
Your prayer times
- Fajr --:--
- Sunrise --:--
- Dhuhr --:--
- Asr --:--
- Maghrib --:--
- Isha --:--
Calculation method
About this map
Where the Adhan is being called right now
Always Adhan is a live view of the call to prayer — the Adhan — as it travels around the world with the sun. Because it is always dawn or dusk somewhere, the Adhan is being called somewhere on Earth in every moment of the day. Set your location to see accurate prayer times, a countdown to the next prayer, and today’s Hijri date.
Questions about the Adhan & prayer times
- How do you know where the Adhan is being called right now?
- It is calculated from the sun. For hundreds of cities worldwide, the site works out the local prayer times for this exact moment from each city’s coordinates, then marks the places where a prayer is being called now. As the Earth turns, the map follows the sun — so the call is always being taken up somewhere.
- Are these prayer times accurate?
- Yes. The times are astronomical — calculated from your coordinates and the sun’s angle, the same way printed prayer timetables are made. You can set your calculation method and Asr madhhab. As always, your local mosque or a local moon-sighting is the final word and may differ by a minute or two.
- What calculation method is used?
- You can choose from the standard methods — Muslim World League, Umm al-Qura (Makkah), Egyptian, Karachi, ISNA, Diyanet and others — and pick the Standard or Hanafi opinion for Asr. The site suggests a sensible default for your country and remembers your choice on your device.
- Is it free? Does it track me?
- It is completely free, and it always will be. No ads, no accounts, no tracking. Your location is used only inside your browser to work out your prayer times — it is never sent to a server, and the site sets no cookies.
- What is the Adhan?
- The Adhan (also spelled azan or athan) is the Islamic call to prayer, announced before each of the five daily prayers (salah): Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib and Isha. Always Adhan lets you feel that call continuing, without pause, somewhere on Earth at every moment.
- Is it Fajr or Maghrib time now?
- Set your location and the next-prayer countdown shows exactly how long until Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib or Isha where you are. The highlighted row is the next prayer, and the arc shows how far through the day you are.
More about how Always Adhan works and who’s behind it.
Sadaqah jariyah
Keep the lights on
This is a small labour of love — quietly built and personally funded by one person, and kept free for Muslims everywhere. It asks for nothing. But if it has been of benefit to you, a little toward the hosting is a welcome sadaqah that keeps the call reaching others.
100% goes to hosting and running costs — nothing more.
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