Add Prayer Times to Your Calendar
The easiest way to add Islamic prayer times to your calendar is to connect SalahTime to your Google Calendar. It automatically blocks Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib and Isha as events each day — accurate to your location and madhab, and updated automatically so you never have to re-import a file.
Why put prayer times in your calendar?
For Muslim professionals, the calendar is where the day is decided. When your prayers are blocked out as events, colleagues can't book meetings over them, you get a reminder before each Salah, and praying on time stops competing with your schedule. It's the difference between hoping you'll find time and knowing the time is already protected.
Choose your calendar
- How to add prayer times to Google Calendar — the step-by-step guide.
- Apple Calendar — coming soon.
- Outlook — coming soon.
Manual import vs. automatic sync
You can download a one-off ICS file of prayer times and import it, but those events are frozen in time — they drift out of date within days and have to be redone. SalahTime connects once and then keeps your calendar correct automatically, every day, wherever you're signed in to Google.