AllTimeZone
Iftar (Maghrib)

Iftar time in Melbourne today

Australia · Australia/Melbourne · UTC+10:00

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Iftar Time Today

Tue, Jul 14

5:19 PM

Maghrib (sunset) · 17:19 local time

These are accurate Maghrib (sunset) times, correct for fasting throughout the year.

Full Prayer Schedule — Tue, Jul 14

🌌Fajr (Dawn)(Suhoor ends)
6:00 AM
🌄Sunrise
7:33 AM
☀️Dhuhr (Noon)
12:26 PM
🌤️Asr (Afternoon)
3:00 PM
🌅Maghrib / Iftar(Iftar time)
5:19 PM
🌙Isha (Night)
6:47 PM

Calculation: Muslim World League method · Fajr 18°, Isha 17° · Asr (Shafi'i)

Iftar Times — Next 7 Days

DateFajr / Suhoor Ends🌅 Iftar (Maghrib)
Tue, Jul 14(Today)6:00 AM5:19 PM
Wed, Jul 156:00 AM5:19 PM
Thu, Jul 166:00 AM5:20 PM
Fri, Jul 175:59 AM5:21 PM
Sat, Jul 185:59 AM5:22 PM
Sun, Jul 195:58 AM5:22 PM
Mon, Jul 205:58 AM5:23 PM

About Iftar in Melbourne

Iftar is the evening meal that breaks the daily fast during Ramadan. It begins at sunset — the moment of the Maghrib prayer. In Melbourne, today's Iftar starts at 5:19 PM (Australia/Melbourne, UTC+10:00).

How fasts are broken: the prophetic tradition is to open the fast with dates and water before performing Maghrib prayer, then return to a fuller meal. Eating in moderation at Iftar prevents the energy crash that often follows large post-fast meals and helps maintain stable hydration through the night.

What is typically served at Iftar

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Dates & water

The traditional opening — three dates and a glass of water. Dates restore blood sugar quickly without overwhelming the digestive system.

🍲

Soup & salad

Light, broth-based soups (lentil, harira in North Africa, çorba in Turkey) and fresh salads ease the stomach into the main meal.

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Main course

Slow-cooked stews, grilled meats, rice or bread. The communal aspect — sharing with family, neighbours and the mosque — is central to Ramadan culture.

Health professionals recommend opening Iftar gently, drinking water steadily through the evening rather than all at once, and keeping the main meal balanced — protein, complex carbohydrates and vegetables — to sustain energy until the following day's Suhoor.

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