
Baltimore Prayer Times
Baltimore, MD · America/New York · ISNA method
Baltimore, MD
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December Schedule Note
Baltimore's shortest days arrive in early December. Maghrib falls around 4:44 PM EST — leaving barely four hours between Dhuhr and Maghrib. Many Baltimore Muslims pray Asr immediately after Dhuhr during the work lunch break to avoid missing it before the early sunset. By late June, Maghrib shifts to 8:18 PM EDT, opening a full evening before Isha.
Qibla Direction from Baltimore
57° NE
Face northeast — the great-circle route crosses the North Atlantic, southern Europe, and descends into the Arabian Peninsula. Use our GPS Qibla compass →
Baltimore's Muslim Communities
🕌 African American Muslim Heritage — Masjid Al-Haqq
Baltimore occupies a singular place in the history of Black American Islam. Masjid Al-Haqq in West Baltimore — originally Muhammad's Mosque No. 6, established in the early 1960s under the Nation of Islam — was among the congregations that followed Imam Warith Deen Mohammed into Sunni Islam after 1975. That transition, replicated at mosques across America, represented one of the most significant religious migrations in modern US history. Masjid Al-Haqq has served Sandtown-Winchester and West Baltimore for over six decades: daily prayers, community development initiatives, youth programs, and economic empowerment work. The mosque stands as a testament to how African American Islam transformed from a separatist movement into mainstream Sunni practice rooted in the Quran and Sunnah.
The Muslim Community Cultural Center of Baltimore (MCCC) complements this legacy, serving a diverse congregation across the city. African American Muslims constitute the majority of Baltimore's Muslim population — reflecting a national pattern in which Black Americans represent the largest single demographic within American Islam.
🌍 Somali Community — Northeast Baltimore Corridor
Baltimore's Somali Muslim community is one of the largest on the East Coast, concentrated in Northeast Baltimore — primarily the Coldstream-Homestead-Montebello neighborhood and along Belair Road and Harford Road. Somali refugee resettlement began in Baltimore in the early 1990s, facilitated by agencies including the International Rescue Committee and Catholic Charities, and grew substantially through the 2000s as civil conflict in Somalia continued. The community established Somali halal butchers, East African restaurants, qaxooti (informal community centers), and Somali-language Friday sermons at neighbourhood mosques.
Second and third-generation Somali Baltimoreans are now prominent in city public schools, Johns Hopkins Hospital and Johns Hopkins University, and local government. The community maintains strong transnational ties, with remittance networks supporting families in Somalia, Kenya, and other countries of temporary refuge.
⚓ Yemeni Community — A Century of Maritime Islam
Baltimore harbors one of the oldest Yemeni Arab Muslim communities in the United States — a distinction rooted in the city's maritime history. Beginning in the 1920s and 1930s, Yemeni seamen working on international cargo ships jumped ship at East Coast ports, drawn by industrial employment at Bethlehem Steel's Sparrows Point plant along the Patapsco River. This quietly established an Arab Muslim presence in Baltimore that predates the post-1965 Immigration Act wave that transformed Muslim demographics across most American cities.
Subsequent generations dispersed into small business — convenience stores, carry-out restaurants, wholesale trade — while maintaining community bonds through mosque attendance, Yemeni cultural associations, and family networks in East Baltimore and Dundalk. Baltimore's Yemeni Muslims represent one of the most historically grounded Arab immigrant communities in the nation.
📚 Maryland Islamic Seminary & South Asian Suburbs
Catonsville, a Baltimore suburb on the city's western edge, is home to the Maryland Islamic Seminary (MIS) — one of the most respected traditional Islamic scholarly institutions in the United States. MIS offers rigorous degree programs in Islamic jurisprudence, Arabic language, Quran memorization, and Islamic theology. Its graduates serve as imams, chaplains, and educators at Muslim institutions from coast to coast. MIS represents Baltimore's commitment to anchoring classical Islamic scholarship within an American civic context.
The broader Baltimore-Columbia-Ellicott City corridor hosts a thriving South Asian Muslim community — Pakistani, Indian, and Bangladeshi families drawn by proximity to Johns Hopkins, the University of Maryland, NSA and government contracting opportunities in the BWI corridor, and Columbia's planned community housing. Islamic Society of Baltimore (ISB), Islamic Society of the Washington Area (ISWA), and Columbia Islamic Center serve these suburban communities with strong weekend schools and professional networking circles.
Baltimore Prayer Times by Month
39.29°N · ISNA method · Eastern Time (EST Nov–Mar / EDT Mar–Nov)
| Month | Fajr | Dhuhr | Asr | Maghrib | Isha |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January | 6:10 AM | 12:07 PM | 2:52 PM | 4:47 PM | 6:15 PM |
| February | 5:50 AM | 12:10 PM | 3:24 PM | 5:22 PM | 6:49 PM |
| March | 5:12 AM | 12:05 PM | 3:55 PM | 6:54 PM | 8:21 PM |
| April | 4:33 AM | 11:58 AM | 4:24 PM | 7:28 PM | 8:55 PM |
| May | 4:04 AM | 11:52 AM | 4:47 PM | 7:58 PM | 9:28 PM |
| June | 3:54 AM | 11:55 AM | 5:01 PM | 8:18 PM | 9:52 PM |
| July | 4:07 AM | 12:03 PM | 4:58 PM | 8:14 PM | 9:43 PM |
| August | 4:39 AM | 11:59 AM | 4:42 PM | 7:45 PM | 9:10 PM |
| September | 5:14 AM | 11:45 AM | 4:14 PM | 7:04 PM | 8:27 PM |
| October | 5:50 AM | 11:33 AM | 3:44 PM | 6:22 PM | 7:47 PM |
| November | 5:32 AM | 11:37 AM | 3:01 PM | 4:57 PM | 6:22 PM |
| December | 6:04 AM | 11:56 AM | 2:48 PM | 4:44 PM | 6:08 PM |
Representative mid-month times for downtown Baltimore. Suburban times (Columbia, Catonsville, Towson, Dundalk) vary by ±1–2 minutes.
Prayer Times Across the Baltimore Metro
Downtown Baltimore
39.29°N · 76.61°W
Inner Harbour, Fells Point
Columbia / Ellicott City
39.22°N · 76.86°W
South Asian, Pakistani community hub
Towson / Baltimore County
39.40°N · 76.60°W
Northern suburbs, UMBC area
Frequently Asked Questions
What time is Fajr in Baltimore MD today?▼
Fajr in Baltimore ranges from approximately 3:54 AM in late June to 6:14 AM in December — a seasonal swing of just over 2 hours 20 minutes. At 39.29°N, Baltimore's prayer schedule closely mirrors Washington DC and Philadelphia. The times shown above are calculated for downtown Baltimore (39.29°N, 76.61°W) using the ISNA method (15° solar depression angle), which is standard at Masjid Al-Haqq, MCCC, and most Baltimore-area mosques. Suburban mosques in Columbia, Catonsville, and Ellicott City will vary by no more than 2 minutes.
What is Masjid Al-Haqq and what is its history?▼
Masjid Al-Haqq is one of the most historically significant Black American mosques in the United States, located in the Sandtown-Winchester neighborhood of West Baltimore. Originally established in the early 1960s as part of the Nation of Islam under the name Muhammad's Mosque No. 6, the congregation followed Imam Warith Deen Mohammed into Sunni Islam after his father's passing in 1975. Imam Mohammed's transition brought hundreds of thousands of African American Muslims into mainstream Sunni practice — Masjid Al-Haqq was central to that transformation in Baltimore. The mosque has served West Baltimore through prayer, community development, business incubation, and social justice advocacy for over six decades, making it one of the oldest continuously operating Muslim institutions in the Mid-Atlantic.
Where is the Somali Muslim community in Baltimore?▼
Baltimore's Somali Muslim community is primarily concentrated in Northeast Baltimore — particularly the Coldstream-Homestead-Montebello (CHM) neighborhood and surrounding areas along Belair Road and Harford Road. Somali refugee resettlement began in Baltimore in the early 1990s and expanded significantly through the 2000s. The community established Somali-owned halal restaurants, grocery stores, and money transfer businesses, primarily along Belair Road. Somali mosques hold Jumu'ah in Somali, and community organizations provide ESL, workforce development, and immigration legal services. Northeast Baltimore's Somali community is one of the largest on the East Coast outside of Minneapolis.
Is there a Yemeni Muslim community in Baltimore?▼
Yes — Baltimore has one of the oldest Yemeni Arab Muslim communities in the United States. Yemeni immigrants, many of them seamen who jumped ship at East Coast ports, began settling in Baltimore as early as the 1920s and 1930s, drawn by steelwork at Bethlehem Steel's Sparrows Point plant. This maritime Yemeni presence makes Baltimore's Arab Muslim roots among the deepest in America. Subsequent generations have diversified into small business, and the community remains active in East Baltimore and Dundalk. Baltimore's Yemeni community predates many more well-known Arab Muslim settlements elsewhere in the country.
What is the Maryland Islamic Seminary?▼
The Maryland Islamic Seminary (MIS) is a prestigious Islamic scholarly institution based in Catonsville, a suburb west of Baltimore. Founded to provide rigorous, traditional Islamic education in an American context, MIS offers degree programs in Islamic Studies, Arabic language, Quran memorization (hifz), and jurisprudence. It attracts students from across the United States and produces imams, Islamic school teachers, and Muslim community leaders. MIS represents the Baltimore region's commitment to combining deep Islamic scholarship with American civic engagement — its graduates serve Muslim communities from coast to coast.
When does Maghrib fall earliest in Baltimore?▼
Maghrib in Baltimore falls earliest around December 8–10, when it occurs approximately 4:44 PM Eastern Standard Time — making it one of the earliest Maghrib times on the East Coast for cities this far south of New England. This creates a very compressed midday for Baltimore Muslims in December: Dhuhr around noon and Maghrib before 5 PM leaves only a short window for Asr. Workers often pray Asr immediately after Dhuhr during December lunch breaks, or combine Dhuhr and Asr mentally before the day ends. By contrast, in late June Maghrib stretches to 8:18 PM EDT, giving Baltimore Muslims a spacious evening before Isha.
What direction is Qibla from Baltimore?▼
From Baltimore, the Qibla points approximately 57–58° from true north — northeast by east. The great-circle route from Baltimore to Mecca crosses the North Atlantic, passes over southern Europe, and descends through the Arabian Peninsula. Baltimore mosques orient their prayer halls to the northeast. When praying in a Baltimore hotel or home, face the northeast wall or corner. Use our Qibla compass at prayertimesnearme.com/qibla for a GPS-accurate bearing from your precise location.