Sehri and Iftar Timings 19 February 2026 across India — Ramadan 2026

Sehri and Iftar timings in India for 19 February 2026 Ramadan with crescent moon and mosque background
Sehri (Suhoor) and Iftar (Maghrib) timings for major Indian cities – 1 Ramadan 1447 AH

Ramadan began in India on 19 February 2026 after local moon sightings. Muslims observing the fast need two daily anchor times: Sehri (end of pre-dawn meal / imsak) — the cut-off time before Fajr — and Iftar (Maghrib / sunset) — the time to break the fast. Timings vary by city and local calculation method (and by mosque committees), so always cross-check with your local masjid or recognized calendar.

Below is a ready reference for Sehri (last time to eat before Fajr) and Iftar (sunset / Maghrib) for major Indian cities on 19 Feb 2026.

Note: Times shown are local Indian Standard Time (IST). Small differences (±1–5 minutes) may occur depending on the calculation method (angle-based vs astronomical sighting) and local announcements.

Sehri (Imsak) and Iftar (Maghrib) Timings— Major Cities (19 Feb 2026)

CitySehri (Imsak) — Last time before FajrIftar (Maghrib) — Sunset
New Delhi05:51 AM06:15 PM.
Mumbai05:51 AM06:40 PM (local calendars show ~06:37–06:40).
Kolkata05:04 AM05:36 PM.
Chennai05:31 AM06:06 PM (approx — local calendars show Maghrib close to 18:06).
Bengaluru05:29 AM06:26 PM.
Hyderabad05:41 AM06:20 PM.
Ahmedabad05:54 AM06:38 PM.
Pune06:00 AM06:37 PM.
Lucknow~05:22 AM~06:15 PM (local sighting-based calendars; small variations possible).
Jaipur~05:40 AM~06:20 PM (approx; check local masjid for final time).
Bhopal~05:50 AM~06:25 PM (approx).
Patna~05:25 AM~05:55 PM (approx).
Ranchi~05:30 AM~05:58 PM (approx).
Raipur~05:45 AM~06:05 PM (approx).
Bhubaneswar~05:10 AM~05:40 PM (approx).
Thiruvananthapuram~05:20 AM~06:10 PM (approx).
Kochi (Cochin)~05:25 AM~06:12 PM (approx).
Guwahati~05:00 AM~05:35 PM (approx).
Kozhikode (Calicut)~05:28 AM~06:36 PM (local calendars show ~18:36).
Srinagar~05:45 AM~06:25 PM (approx; wide latitudinal variations mean verify locally).

How these times are calculated

  1. Astronomical sunset & sunrise: Iftar = Maghrib (instant the sun fully sets). Sehri (Imsak) is normally a few minutes before Fajr (astronomical dawn). Most published Ramadan timetables use a standard astronomical algorithm (solar coordinates) to compute these times for each city.
  2. Local mosque / sighting committees: In some places, local moon-sighting committees or masjids may confirm the day by direct sighting; they may also publish slightly adjusted timetables. Large city calendars usually harmonize with major mosque committees.
  3. Fiqh differences: Shia (Jafri) and some Hanafi tables sometimes add or subtract a few minutes (e.g., imsak −10 min or iftar +10 min). Always check denominational local announcements if that’s relevant to your readers.

Quick references


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