Iftar in Antalya set for 18:53 on 24 February 2026, official imsakiye sets timetable

Iftar in Antalya set for 18:53 on 24 February 2026, official imsakiye sets timetable

Antalya’s iftar time for Tuesday, 24 February 2026 has been fixed at 18: 53, the Diyanet İşleri Başkanlığı imsakiye establishes. The timing matters now because thousands of residents will align evening prayer and communal routines around that exact moment on the sixth day of Ramazan.

24 Şubat Antalya iftar vakti confirmed at 18: 53

The official imsakiye lists the evening adhan and the opening of fasts across Antalya on 24 Şubat Salı at precisely 18: 53. That time coincides with the start of akşam namazı, meaning the call to prayer and the moment to break fast arrive simultaneously for the city’s worshippers.

Diyanet İşleri Başkanlığı imsakiye announcement sets schedule

Diyanet İşleri Başkanlığı published the imsakiye timetable that fixes the day’s key prayer and fasting times. The announcement provides the reference point many households and mosques use to plan iftar gatherings and the subsequent ritual schedule.

Ramazan’ın altıncı günü shapes Antalya’s streets and households

On the sixth day of the 2026 Ramazan, Antalya’s neighborhoods—from historic quarters to modern residential areas—are preparing for the evening ritual. Thousands of citizens are expected to gather at home tables and in communal settings to break their fast when the 18: 53 adhan sounds, an event described as the most anticipated moment of the day.

Yatsı at 20: 07 and teravih following iftar

The imsakiye also shows that yatsı namazı is scheduled for 20: 07. After breaking their fast at 18: 53 and a short period of rest, residents are expected to head to mosques for teravih prayers, which will follow the yatsı service. The sequence—iftar, rest, yatsı, then teravih—frames the evening’s communal worship rhythm.

One-minute change from yesterday influences daily routines

Official figures note a one-minute difference from the previous day’s iftar time. That small shift, though numerically minor, affects the synchronization of personal schedules, mosque timetables and transport patterns across the city as families and institutions adjust meal preparation and prayer arrangements.

At 18: 53, Antalya’s streets are expected to fall into the familiar hush that accompanies the opening of fasts, a pause stretching from crowded avenues to quiet villages. The imsakiye’s specified times provide the cue for those moments of collective pause and thanksgiving.

What makes this notable is the way a centralized timetable—from Diyanet İşleri Başkanlığı’s imsakiye—organizes daily life during Ramazan: a single published schedule translates into synchronized household meals, mosque services and the flow of city life. With yatsı set for 20: 07 and teravih to follow, the imsakiye ties together the evening’s spiritual and social practices around the fixed 18: 53 mark.

For Antalya’s residents, the official times eliminate uncertainty and permit coordinated planning for iftar gatherings and mosque attendance. The city’s sixth Ramazan evening will therefore unfold the timetable already circulated, with the 18: 53 adhan marking the moment every table and mosque will respond.