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Eid al-Fitr 2026: Date, Moon Sighting, Prayer Times, School Closures & Celebrations

Eid al-Fitr 2026 begins at sundown on Thursday, March 19, 2026, and is primarily observed on Friday, March 20, 2026.

It marks the end of Ramadan 1447 AH and the first day of Shawwal in the Hijri calendar. Celebrations typically continue for two to three days, through Sunday, March 22, 2026, in most Muslim-majority countries.

This guide covers everything needed for Eid al-Fitr 2026: confirmed and projected dates by country, the Shawwal crescent moon sighting process, Eid prayer times, Zakat al-Fitr obligations and amounts, school and workplace closures in the US, UK, and Canada, regional celebration traditions, greetings in Arabic and English, traditional foods, gift customs, and frequently asked questions.

Table of Contents

When Is Eid al-Fitr 2026? Confirmed Date and Moon Sighting

Eid al-Fitr 2026 is expected to fall on Friday, March 20, 2026, based on astronomical calculations placing the astronomical new moon (conjunction) on Thursday, March 19, 2026, at approximately 01:23 UTC.

The Shawwal crescent (hilal) sighting was scheduled for the evening of Wednesday, March 18, 2026, in Saudi Arabia, with confirmation from the Saudi Supreme Court determining the final date for most of the Muslim world.

The UAE government confirmed a four-day public sector holiday running from Thursday, March 19, through Sunday, March 22, 2026. Qatar’s public sector observed the holiday from Monday, March 17, through Sunday, March 23, 2026.

The date carries the Hijri designation 1 Shawwal 1447 AH.

Eid al-Fitr 2026 Date by Country

Dates vary by one day across countries, depending on whether local or global moon sighting methods are used.

The table below reflects confirmed or projected observation dates.

CountryExpected Observation DateNotes
Saudi ArabiaFriday, March 20, 2026Subject to Saudi Supreme Court moon sighting confirmation
United Arab EmiratesFriday, March 20, 20264-day public holiday: March 19–22
QatarFriday, March 20, 2026Public holiday March 17–23
EgyptFriday, March 20, 2026Dar al-Ifta announcement expected March 18
MoroccoFriday, March 20, 2026Ministry of Habous and Islamic Affairs confirmation
TurkeyFriday, March 20, 2026Diyanet İşleri Başkanlığı (Directorate of Religious Affairs)
PakistanFriday, March 20, 2026Subject to Ruet-e-Hilal Committee confirmation; Saturday, March 21 possible
IndiaFriday, March 20, 2026Saturday, March 21 possible in some states
BangladeshFriday, March 20, 2026Bangladesh National Moon Sighting Committee
IndonesiaFriday, March 20, 2026Ministry of Religious Affairs (Kemenag) isbat session expected March 18
MalaysiaFriday, March 20, 2026Department of Islamic Development Malaysia (JAKIM)
NigeriaFriday, March 20, 2026Sultan of Sokoto announcement; Saturday, March 21 possible
GhanaFriday, March 20, 2026Chief Imam of Ghana office
United KingdomFriday, March 20, 2026Saturday, March 21 possible; depends on ICOUK or local sighting
United StatesFriday, March 20, 2026Fiqh Council of North America uses astronomical calculation: March 20 confirmed
CanadaFriday, March 20, 2026Follows FCNA or local moon sighting; March 20 or March 21
GermanyFriday, March 20, 2026Zentralrat der Muslime in Deutschland guidance
AustraliaSaturday, March 21, 2026Australian Fatwa Council; typically one day after Saudi

Dates are subject to final moon sighting confirmation. A one-day variance is possible in all countries. Verify with the relevant national Islamic authority, as the March 18 announcements are finalised.

Why Does Eid Fall on Different Days in Different Countries?

The variation occurs because Islamic months begin with the confirmed sighting of the Shawwal crescent moon (hilal), and sighting conditions differ by geography. There are two primary methods used globally.

The first is local moon sighting (ru’yah): a country only begins Shawwal once its own religious authorities or credible witnesses confirm sighting the hilal within that territory. This method is used by Pakistan (Ruet-e-Hilal Committee), parts of South Asia, and several West African countries.

Because the crescent becomes visible progressively from west to east, Saudi Arabia and North Africa typically sight it before South and Southeast Asia.

The second is astronomical calculation (hisab): the start of the month is determined by the calculated time of the astronomical new moon, not a physical sighting. The Fiqh Council of North America (FCNA) and JAKIM in Malaysia apply this method. This approach produces a fixed, pre-determined date and eliminates last-minute uncertainty.

A third approach, used by some communities, follows the global sighting principle: if the hilal is sighted anywhere in the world, all Muslims may begin the month. This is the position of the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) in certain years.

The result is that Eid al-Fitr can legitimately fall on two different calendar dates globally — both are considered valid within Islamic jurisprudence.

The Shawwal 1447 AH equivalence maps to the Gregorian period of March 20 to April 17, 2026.

Eid al-Fitr 2026 Moon Sighting: Status

Status as of Tuesday, March 17, 2026: Awaiting confirmation. Saudi Arabia scheduled its official Shawwal moon sighting attempt for the evening of Wednesday, March 18, 2026.

Astronomical visibility models indicate the crescent will be marginally visible from parts of the Arabian Peninsula and North Africa on the evening of March 18. If confirmed, Eid al-Fitr begins at sundown on March 19 and is observed on Friday, March 20. If not sighted, Ramadan completes 30 days and Eid shifts to Saturday, March 21.

What Is Eid al-Fitr? Meaning, History, and Islamic Significance

Eid al-Fitr is the Islamic festival marking the end of Ramadan, the month of obligatory fasting (sawm). The name translates directly from Arabic as “Festival of Breaking the Fast” — Eid (عيد) means festival or celebration, and al-Fitr (الفطر) derives from the root fatar, meaning to break a fast or to begin a new state.

It is also called the “Lesser Eid” (Eid al-Saghir) to distinguish it from Eid al-Adha, the “Greater Eid,” which falls approximately 70 days later. In South Asia, it is commonly called Meethi Eid (Sweet Eid), a reference to the tradition of eating sweets before prayer. In Southeast Asia, it is called Hari Raya Aidilfitri in Malay, and Lebaran colloquially in Indonesia.

Historical Origin of Eid al-Fitr

Eid al-Fitr was established in Medina, in the second year of the Hijra (approximately 624 CE), following the Battle of Badr. The hadith narrator Anas ibn Malik (رضي الله عنه) reported that when the Prophet Muhammad (ﷺ) arrived in Medina, the people had two days of annual festivity.

The Prophet said: “Allah has given you better than those two days: the day of al-Adha (sacrifice) and the day of al-Fitr (breaking the fast).” (Sunan Abu Dawud, Hadith 1134). This hadith establishes the dual occasion of Eid in Islamic tradition and is classified as authentic (sahih) in the major hadith collections.

Eid al-Fitr vs Eid al-Adha: Key Differences

These are the two major annual Islamic celebrations. They share communal prayer, charitable obligations, and family gatherings, but differ in occasion, timing, and ritual.

FeatureEid al-Fitr 2026Eid al-Adha 2026
Arabic Nameعيد الفطرعيد الأضحى
Also CalledLesser Eid, Sweet Eid, Meethi EidGreater Eid, Feast of Sacrifice
Date (2026)Friday, March 20, 2026Wednesday, May 27, 2026 (projected)
OccasionEnd of Ramadan fastingCommemoration of Prophet Ibrahim’s willingness to sacrifice his son
Duration1–3 days3–4 days (Days of Tashreeq)
Religious ObligationZakat al-Fitr (charity before prayer)Udhiyah / Qurbani (animal sacrifice, if able)
Connection to PillarSawm (Fasting)Hajj (Pilgrimage)
Recommended FoodEat something sweet before prayer (dates)Eat from the sacrificed animal after prayer
Fasting StatusFasting is strictly forbidden (haram)Fasting on Day of Eid is forbidden; voluntary fast on Day of Arafah (May 26) is recommended

Eid al-Adha 2026 coincides with the Hajj season and is tied to the Day of Arafah on Tuesday, May 26, 2026, and the three Days of Tashreeq (May 27–29, 2026).

Eid al-Fitr Prayer 2026: Times, Method, and Religious Obligations

How to Perform Eid Prayer (Salat al-Eid)

Salat al-Eid consists of two rakat (units of prayer) with additional Takbeer (saying Allahu Akbar), performed after sunrise and before midday on the first day of Shawwal.

It is considered a communal obligation (wajib in the Hanafi school; Sunnah Mu’akkadah in the Shafi’i and Maliki schools) and is performed in congregation at a mosque or open prayer ground (musalla or idgah).

The structure of Eid prayer by the school of jurisprudence (madhab):

MadhabTakbeer in Rakat 1Takbeer in Rakat 2Ruling
Hanafi3 extra Takbeer after opening3 extra Takbeer before rukuWajib (obligatory)
Shafi’i7 extra Takbeer after opening5 extra Takbeer after standingSunnah Mu’akkadah
Maliki6 extra Takbeer after opening5 extra Takbeer after standingSunnah Mu’akkadah
Hanbali6 extra Takbeer after opening5 extra Takbeer after standingWajib

After the two rakat, the imam delivers the Eid sermon (khutbah). Unlike the Friday Jumu’ah prayer, the Eid khutbah comes after the prayer, not before. Listening to it is Sunnah, not obligatory.

Women, children, and travellers are encouraged to attend Eid prayer. Anas ibn Malik reported that the Prophet (ﷺ) commanded even menstruating women to attend the Eid prayer ground but to stand apart from the prayer lines (Sahih al-Bukhari, Hadith 324).

Takbeer Text for Eid

The Eid Takbeer recited in congregation and on the way to prayer:

Arabic: اللَّهُ أَكْبَرُ، اللَّهُ أَكْبَرُ، لَا إِلَهَ إِلَّا اللَّهُ، وَاللَّهُ أَكْبَرُ، اللَّهُ أَكْبَرُ، وَلِلَّهِ الْحَمْدُ

Transliteration: Allahu Akbar, Allahu Akbar, La ilaha illallah, Wallahu Akbar, Allahu Akbar, Walillahil hamd.

Translation: Allah is the Greatest, Allah is the Greatest, there is no deity worthy of worship except Allah, and Allah is the Greatest, Allah is the Greatest, and to Allah belongs all praise.

Sunnah Acts on Eid Day

The following acts are established Sunnah (prophetic practice) for Eid al-Fitr morning, based on authentic hadith narrations:

  1. Perform ghusl (full ritual bath) before going to the prayer ground.
  2. Apply perfume (for men).
  3. Wear new or best available clothes.
  4. Eat an odd number of dates (1, 3, or 5) before attending Eid prayer — this is specific to Eid al-Fitr and distinguishes it from Eid al-Adha, where eating before prayer is not practised.
  5. Recite the Eid Takbeer on the way to the prayer ground.
  6. Take a different route returning home from the route taken to the prayer.
  7. Offer congratulations and exchange greetings.

Eid Prayer Times 2026 by City

Prayer times vary based on local sunrise and astronomical data. The general window for Eid prayer is 15–20 minutes after sunrise until approximately 15 minutes before midday (Dhuhr). The times below are approximate; confirm exact times with a local mosque or IslamicFinder.

CityApproximate SunriseApproximate Eid Prayer StartNotes
Mecca, Saudi Arabia06:0907:00–07:30Grand Mosque prayer; millions in attendance
Dubai, UAE06:2007:15–07:30Multiple locations across Emirates
Cairo, Egypt06:0107:00–07:30Al-Azhar Square and major mosques
Istanbul, Turkey06:5707:45–08:00Major open-air prayer at Sultanahmet
Karachi, Pakistan06:2507:30–08:00Subject to moon sighting date change
Lagos, Nigeria06:3607:30–08:00National Mosque and open grounds
Accra, Ghana06:0407:00–07:30National Chief Imam coordinates timing
Jakarta, Indonesia05:5806:45–07:00Istiqal Mosque; world’s largest Eid gathering
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia07:1508:00–08:30Masjid Negara and city mosques
London, United Kingdom06:1707:00–07:30Regent’s Park Mosque; Wembley Arena; varies
Birmingham, UK06:2307:15–07:30Many mosques; large outdoor musalla events
New York, USA07:0907:50–08:15Multiple locations; ISNA/FCNA date: March 20
Dearborn, USA07:4708:30–09:00Ford Community & Performing Arts Center
Toronto, Canada07:2708:15–08:30Multiple masajid; large outdoor gatherings

These times are estimates. Use IslamicFinder (islamicfinder.org) or your local mosque’s confirmed schedule for accurate times.

Zakat al-Fitr 2026: Amount, Obligation, and Deadline

Zakat al-Fitr (also called Fitrana or Sadaqat al-Fitr) is a mandatory charitable payment every Muslim must make before the Eid al-Fitr prayer. It is obligatory on every Muslim who possesses food beyond their immediate needs, including on behalf of all dependants (spouse, children, elderly parents) in their care. It is not the same as annual Zakat al-Maal (wealth zakat), which is calculated at 2.5% of savings held for one lunar year.

The original measure is one sa’ (approximately 2.5–3 kg) of the local staple food — classically wheat, barley, dates, or raisins in the hadith of Ibn Umar (رضي الله عنهما) in Sahih al-Bukhari (Hadith 1503). Modern scholars and zakat organisations convert this to a monetary equivalent based on local food costs.

Zakat al-Fitr 2026 Amounts by Country/Region

Country / Region2026 Amount (Per Person)BasisAuthoritative Source
United States$15–$20 USDStaple grain equivalent + COLA adjustmentFiqh Council of North America (FCNA)
United Kingdom£5–£7 GBP2.5 kg wheat equivalentIslamic Relief UK
CanadaCAD $20–$25Adjusted for Canadian food costsISNA Canada
UAEAED 25–352.5 kg rice equivalentUAE General Authority of Islamic Affairs
Saudi ArabiaSAR 15–252.5 kg rice / wheatSaudi Ministry of Islamic Affairs
PakistanPKR 320–4002.5 kg wheat equivalentCentral Ruet-e-Hilal Committee
BangladeshBDT 115–1502.5 kg rice equivalentIslamic Foundation Bangladesh
NigeriaNGN 2,500–4,0002.5 kg rice equivalentSultan of Sokoto office
GhanaGHS 20–352.5 kg rice equivalentOffice of the National Chief Imam
AustraliaAUD $15–$20Staple grain equivalentAustralian National Imams Council (ANIC)

Amounts are estimates based on prior-year figures and typical cost adjustments. Confirm with your local mosque or Islamic organisation before payment, as annual amounts are recalculated closer to Eid.

Deadline: Zakat al-Fitr must be paid before the Eid prayer begins on Friday, March 20, 2026. It becomes invalid if paid after the prayer has started. Payment can be made from the beginning of Ramadan, but it is most recommended in the final days before Eid.

Who does not pay: A person who does not have food beyond what is sufficient for themselves and their dependants on the day and night of Eid is exempt from Zakat al-Fitr.

Where to pay: Local mosques accept Zakat al-Fitr directly. Verified online platforms include Islamic Relief (islamicrelief.org), Zakat Foundation of America, National Zakat Foundation (UK), and LaunchGood‘s Eid al-Fitr campaigns.

Eid al-Fitr 2026 School Closures, Public Holidays, and Workplace Policies

Eid al-Fitr 2026 is observed on Friday, March 20, 2026, and several major school districts in the United States, United Kingdom, and Canada have confirmed closures or special accommodation designations for that date.

Unlike Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur — which achieved official closure status in New York City schools in 1960 — Eid al-Fitr was not added to the NYC Department of Education calendar until 2015, following advocacy by Muslim community organisations. Several other major districts followed between 2018 and 2023.

US School District Closures for Eid al-Fitr 2026

The following districts have officially approved 2025–2026 academic calendars, marking Friday, March 20, 2026, as a holiday or non-instructional day.

StateSchool DistrictStatus
New YorkNew York City Department of Education (NYC DOE)Closed — Holiday
MarylandMontgomery County Public Schools (MCPS)No School for Students (Non-Instructional Day)
MarylandPrince George’s County Public Schools (PGCPS)Closed — Holiday
VirginiaFairfax County Public Schools (FCPS)Closed — Student Holiday
New JerseyJersey City Public SchoolsClosed — Holiday
New JerseyPaterson Public SchoolsClosed — Holiday
New JerseyClifton Public SchoolsClosed — Holiday
PennsylvaniaSchool District of PhiladelphiaClosed — Holiday
MichiganDearborn Public SchoolsClosed — Holiday
MichiganDetroit Public Schools Community DistrictClosed — Holiday

The combined enrollment across confirmed US districts exceeds 1.6 million students. The districts represent some of the largest Muslim-American populations in the country — Dearborn, Michigan, has the highest concentration of Arab Americans of any US city.

UK School Closures for Eid al-Fitr 2026

In the United Kingdom, school closures for Eid al-Fitr are not mandated nationally and vary by school and local authority. Schools in areas with significant Muslim populations, particularly in Birmingham, Bradford, Manchester, Tower Hamlets (London), and Luton, have the highest likelihood of closure.

CitySchool / TypeStatus
BirminghamThe Olive School, Birmingham (Islamic free school)Closed — March 19 and March 20
ManchesterCedar Mount AcademyClosed — March 20
LondonForest Gate Community SchoolClosed — March 20
LondonTower Hamlets Borough (numerous schools)Varies — check individual school
BradfordMultiple faith and community schoolsVaries — many close for Eid

Important: UK schools that do not officially close typically authorise Eid absences as a one-day authorised religious observance. Parents should notify the school in advance. An unauthorised absence fine may apply in some local authorities if notice is not given.

Canada: School Closures and Accommodation Policies

Most Canadian school boards do not issue blanket closures for Eid al-Fitr but provide religious accommodation under provincial human rights codes. Three types of accommodation exist: full closure, faith/creed days, and individual accommodation.

ProvinceSchool BoardStatusPolicy Type
AlbertaEdmonton Public Schools (EPSB)No School for Students — March 20Professional Development / Eid designation
OntarioPeel District School Board (PDSB)Faith and Creed Accommodation DaySome schools closed; others open
OntarioToronto District School Board (TDSB)Accommodation AvailableStudents may take the day; no test scheduling
OntarioYork Region District School BoardAccommodation AvailableRequests honoured under faith and creed policy
British ColumbiaMultiple districtsOpen — Accommodation on RequestIndividual accommodation per Human Rights Code

Is Eid al-Fitr 2026 a Public Holiday in the USA, UK, or Canada?

Eid al-Fitr is not a federal public holiday in the United States, a UK bank holiday, or a Canadian statutory holiday.

However, legal frameworks in all three countries protect the right to religious accommodation.

CountryFederal / National Holiday StatusLegal ProtectionNotes
United StatesNot a federal holidayTitle VII of the Civil Rights Act (1964) requires employers to provide reasonable accommodation for religious observancesSome states and cities recognise it officially; NYC and NJ state employees may request it
United KingdomNot a UK bank holidayEquality Act 2010 (religion and belief protected characteristic)Employees entitled to request the day as annual leave or unpaid leave
CanadaNot a statutory holidayCanadian Human Rights Act; provincial equivalentsEmployers must accommodate to the point of undue hardship

In Muslim-majority countries, Eid al-Fitr is an official public holiday. The UAE government declared a four-day public sector holiday (Thursday, March 19, through Sunday, March 22, 2026).

Qatar’s public sector observed seven days off (Monday, March 17, through Sunday, March 23).

Colleges and Universities: Eid al-Fitr 2026

CUNY (City University of New York) does not schedule classes on Eid al-Fitr. Most other US and UK universities remain open but maintain religious observance policies that allow students to miss class without penalty.

Institution TypeTypical PolicyWhat Students Should Do
CUNY (New York)No classes scheduled — Eid al-FitrNo action needed; confirmed holiday
Other US UniversitiesOpen; religious accommodation policyNotify faculty in advance; most will grant excused absence
UK UniversitiesOpen; equality and diversity policyContact personal tutor or student services before March 18
Canadian UniversitiesOpen; religious accommodationSubmit formal accommodation request to the registrar

How Is Eid al-Fitr Celebrated Around the World?

Eid al-Fitr celebrations share four universal elements across all Muslim communities: communal Eid prayer, Zakat al-Fitr, festive meals with family, and wearing new or best clothes. Regional traditions expand significantly beyond these core practices.

Eid al-Fitr Traditions in South Asia (Pakistan, India, Bangladesh)

The night before Eid — Chand Raat (Moon Night) — is as culturally significant as Eid morning itself in South Asia. When the moon is sighted, bazaars remain open through the night. Women and girls apply henna (mehndi) in intricate patterns; this practice has no specific Islamic basis but is a deeply embedded cultural tradition in Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh.

On Eid morning, families eat sheer khurma — a dish of vermicelli noodles cooked in milk with dates, nuts, and cardamom — before or after Eid prayer. This is culturally ubiquitous across the region, regardless of economic background.

Elders give Eidi (cash gifts) to children and younger relatives; the amount varies, but the practice is considered obligatory by family expectation if not by religious law.

Men typically wear shalwar kameez with a topi (cap); women wear embroidered shalwar kameez, lehenga choli, or gharara. The term Meethi Eid (Sweet Eid) distinguishes Eid al-Fitr from Eid al-Adha colloquially across Urdu-speaking communities.

Eid al-Fitr Traditions in the Middle East and North Africa

In Egypt, kahk — round shortbread biscuits filled with dates, nuts, or Turkish delight, dusted with icing sugar — are the defining Eid food. Egyptian families bake kahk from scratch in the days before Eid, often in large communal batches. Maamoul (معمول), stuffed semolina pastries filled with dates or pistachios, serve the same cultural role in the Levant (Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Palestine) and the Gulf states.

In Saudi Arabia, large open-air prayer gatherings (idgah) draw tens of thousands of worshippers. The King of Saudi Arabia traditionally leads or attends the Eid prayer at Masjid al-Haram in Mecca or at the National Guard parade ground in Riyadh. The UAE government-funded Eid al-Fitr celebrations in 2025 included public events across all seven emirates, large communal meals, and fireworks displays in Dubai and Abu Dhabi.

Family visits — including visiting the graves of deceased relatives on Eid morning, a practice endorsed by many scholars and common across Egypt, North Africa, and parts of the Levant — are central to MENA Eid customs.

Eid al-Fitr Traditions in West Africa (Nigeria, Ghana)

“Barka Da Sallah” is the Hausa-language Eid greeting used across Northern Nigeria and in Hausa-speaking communities in Niger, Ghana, and the broader Sahel region. It translates as “Congratulations on the prayer” (Sallah being the Hausa rendering of Salah). The response is “Barka dai” or “Da Sallah”.

In Northern Nigeria — particularly in Kano, Sokoto, Kaduna, and Maiduguri — the Durbar festival takes place on Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha. Traditional rulers (emirs) receive elaborate processions of horses and riders in full regalia at the Emir’s palace.

The Kano Durbar is among the largest and most visually documented traditional festivals in West Africa and is recognised by UNESCO as a significant element of Nigerian cultural heritage.

In Ghana, large open-air prayer grounds in Tamale, Kumasi, and Accra host tens of thousands. The National Chief Imam of Ghana leads prayers in Accra, with a national television broadcast. Post-prayer celebrations involve communal meals, drumming, and gift-giving in traditional dress, including the smock (fugu) in the north.

Eid al-Fitr Traditions in Southeast Asia (Indonesia, Malaysia)

“Selamat Hari Raya Aidilfitri” is the formal Malay greeting in Malaysia, Brunei, and Singapore. In Indonesia, the informal greeting is “Selamat Lebaran” or “Mohon Maaf Lahir dan Batin” — the latter translating as “I ask for forgiveness, outwardly and inwardly.” The emphasis on mutual forgiveness is culturally distinctive in Southeast Asian Eid practice.

The tradition of balik kampung (returning to one’s hometown) in Malaysia and mudik in Indonesia involves the world’s largest annual human migration. In 2024, Indonesia’s Ministry of Transportation estimated 193 million people travelled for Lebaran, representing approximately 70% of Indonesia’s population moving simultaneously. Roads, railways, and airports experience extreme congestion in the three days before Eid.

Traditional foods include ketupat (compressed rice cakes cooked in woven palm leaf pouches), rendang (slow-cooked beef in spiced coconut milk), opor ayam (chicken in coconut gravy), and sambal goreng. Families wear baju kurung (Malaysia) or batik (Indonesia) in coordinated family colours for Eid morning.

Eid Mubarak 2026: Greetings, Wishes, and What to Say

The standard Eid al-Fitr greeting is “Eid Mubarak” (عيد مبارك), meaning “Blessed Eid.” It is appropriate for all Muslims across every cultural background, can be used both before and on the day of Eid, and is the correct greeting for non-Muslims to use when acknowledging the holiday to Muslim colleagues, friends, or neighbours.

How to Wish Someone, Eid Mubarak

GreetingLanguageTransliterationMeaningRegion / Use
عيد مباركArabicEid MubarakBlessed EidUniversal
تَقَبَّلَ اللَّهُ مِنَّا وَمِنْكُمْArabicTaqabbal Allahu Minna Wa MinkumMay Allah accept from us and from youReligious response; universal
عيد سعيدArabicEid SaeedHappy EidMiddle East
سلامت هاری راياMalaySelamat Hari RayaCongratulations on the great dayMalaysia, Indonesia, Brunei, Singapore
بركة دا صلىHausaBarka Da SallahCongratulations on the prayerNigeria, Ghana, Niger
عيد شريف مباركArabicEid Shareef MubarakBlessed holy EidNorth Africa
کل عام وأنتم بخيرArabicKullu Aam Wa Antum BikhayrMay you be well every yearEgypt, Levant

The traditional response to “Eid Mubarak” is “Khair Mubarak” (خير مبارك) or, more formally, “Taqabbal Allahu Minna Wa Minkum.”

Eid al-Fitr 2026 Wishes: Messages for Different Contexts

The following messages are suitable for different audiences and communication channels.

For family (personal, warm tone): “Wishing you and your family a blessed Eid al-Fitr. May this day bring peace, joy, and the acceptance of all your prayers and fasts. Eid Mubarak.”

For colleagues or professional contacts: “Eid Mubarak to you and your family. Wishing you a joyful celebration and a peaceful start to Shawwal.”

Short social media caption: “Eid Mubarak 2026 🌙 — Wishing all who observe a blessed Eid al-Fitr and a month filled with gratitude.”

From a non-Muslim to a Muslim colleague: “Eid Mubarak — I hope you have a wonderful celebration with your family.”

For children (from an elder): “Eid Mubarak, little one. May every Eid bring you more joy than the last.”

Eid al-Fitr for Non-Muslims: How to Acknowledge the Holiday Respectfully

“Eid Mubarak” is always appropriate for non-Muslims to say to a Muslim colleague, friend, neighbour, or student.

No religious knowledge or affiliation is required to use it. The phrase is universally recognised and universally welcomed.

These additional points apply in professional and social settings:

  • Do say: “Eid Mubarak,” “Happy Eid,” or “I hope you have a wonderful Eid.” All are correct and appreciated.
  • Do not say: “Happy Ramadan” on Eid day. Ramadan is the month of fasting that ends before Eid. This conflation is a common error.
  • Food and gifts: Bringing food or sweets to a Muslim colleague on Eid is a thoughtful gesture. Ensure any food is halal (no pork or alcohol ingredients). Commercial sweets, fruit, or date boxes are universally safe.
  • For employers: If a Muslim employee requests Eid al-Fitr as a day off, the legally correct approach in the US (Title VII), UK (Equality Act 2010), and Canada (Canadian Human Rights Act) is to treat it as a religious accommodation request and approve it unless a specific, documented undue hardship applies.
  • For teachers: Do not schedule major assessments, presentations, or field trips on Eid al-Fitr. Several major districts’ accommodation policies explicitly prohibit this.
  • For event planners: Eid al-Fitr 2026 falls on Friday, March 20. Scheduling community events, work socials, or training sessions on that date will conflict with observance for Muslim attendees.

Eid al-Fitr Food: Traditional Dishes and Regional Recipes

Eid al-Fitr begins with a sweet food eaten before Eid prayer — classically an odd number of dates, following the Sunnah of the Prophet (ﷺ).

The festive meal that follows prayer varies significantly by region, but sweets, meat dishes, and rice preparations are present across nearly all cultures.

Traditional Eid al-Fitr Breakfast Foods by Region

DishOriginKey IngredientsWhen Served
Sheer KhurmaPakistan, India, AfghanistanVermicelli, milk, dates, saffron, cardamom, nutsBefore or after Eid prayer
KahkEgyptSemolina, butter, dates or nuts, icing sugarMorning of Eid; gifted to neighbours
MaamoulLevant, GulfSemolina, butter, rose water, dates or pistachiosMorning of Eid; several days around Eid
BaklavaTurkey, BalkansPhyllo dough, pistachios or walnuts, honey syrupServed with tea; gifted to visitors
Malsouka / BriouatTunisia, MoroccoPastry, almond paste, honey or keftaBreakfast and throughout the day
Selat Sunda / Opor AyamIndonesia, MalaysiaChicken or beef in coconut-based spiced gravyPost-prayer lunch
Halwa SoojiSouth Asia, Middle EastSemolina, ghee, sugar, cardamomEarly morning before prayer
DatesUniversalMedjool, Ajwa, or any varietyBefore Eid prayer (Sunnah)

Eid al-Fitr Recipes: Key Dishes to Prepare

The following dishes appear across Eid menus globally and represent the most popular foods during Eid al-Fitr.

Sheer Khurma (Pakistan/India): Sauté vermicelli in ghee until golden. Add whole milk, bring to a gentle simmer. Add chopped dates, cashews, almonds, pistachios, cardamom, and a pinch of saffron dissolved in warm milk. Simmer 15–20 minutes until thickened. Serve warm or chilled. Regional variations include rose water and dried coconut.

Maamoul (Levant/Gulf): Mix fine semolina with melted butter and orange blossom water; rest overnight. Form a shell, fill with a date paste (dates blended with a small amount of butter and cinnamon), seal, and press into a traditional wooden mould (tabi’). Bake at 175°C for 15–18 minutes. Dust with icing sugar once cooled. The shelf life is 2–3 weeks, making advance preparation practical.

Biryani (South Asia/Gulf): Long-grain basmati rice, marinated meat (chicken, lamb, or beef), whole spices (cardamom, cloves, bay leaf, cinnamon), caramelised onions, saffron-infused milk, and fresh herbs. Cooked using the dum method — sealed pot, steam from the bottom heat. A full lamb biryani for 8 people requires approximately 1.5 kg basmati rice, 2 kg bone-in lamb, 3 cups yoghurt, and 2–3 hours total preparation time.

Eid al-Fitr 2026: Gifts, Outfits, and Activities

Eid al-Fitr Gift Traditions: Eidi and Beyond

Eidi (also spelled Eidiyah or Eidiya) is the tradition of giving cash to children and younger family members on Eid morning. It is universal across South Asia, the Middle East, North Africa, Southeast Asia, and Muslim diaspora communities globally.

The amount is not fixed by religious law; cultural norms vary from a few coins to substantial gifts depending on the giver’s means and relationship to the child.

Gift CategoryRecipientExamplesNotes
Cash (Eidi)Children, younger relativesEnvelopes, bank transfersAmount varies by region and relationship
New ClothesAll agesThobe, abaya, shalwar kameez, baju kurungWearing new clothes on Eid is Sunnah
Prayer ItemsAdultsPrayer mat, tasbeeh, Quran, attar/oudPractical and religiously significant
Food HampersFamily, neighboursDates, sweets, kahk, maamoul boxesCommon in Egypt, Gulf, and UK communities
BooksChildren, studentsIslamic children’s books, activity setsGrowing category; widely available online
Home FragranceAdultsOud, bakhoor, rose water, amberParticularly popular in Gulf culture
Sweets and ConfectioneryNeighbours, colleaguesBaklava, Turkish delight, chocolatesGifting to non-Muslim neighbours is common

What to Wear for Eid al-Fitr 2026

Wearing new or best available clothing on Eid al-Fitr is a confirmed Sunnah. The hadith of Abdullah ibn Umar (رضي الله عنهما) records that Umar ibn al-Khattab purchased a silk robe to wear for Eid and the Friday prayer (Sahih al-Bukhari).

The Prophet (ﷺ) did not prohibit the act of wearing new clothes for Eid; he only corrected the choice of silk for men (prohibited for men in Islam).

Regional dress by community:

CommunityMen’s Traditional DressWomen’s Traditional Dress
Arab (Gulf, Levant)White thobe, ghutra and iqalAbaya with embroidery; colourful jalabiya for indoor gatherings
South AsianShalwar kameez with topi; sherwani for special occasionsEmbroidered shalwar kameez, lehenga, or gharara
Southeast AsianBaju Melayu (Malaysia); batik shirt (Indonesia)Baju kurung, baju kebaya
West AfricanAgbada or kaftan (Nigeria); smock/fugu (Northern Ghana)Wrapper and blouse; embroidered boubou
Western diasporaMix of traditional and contemporary modest wearModest Western wear or traditional dress of heritage country

Eid al-Fitr Activities for Kids and Families 2026

The following activities are appropriate across age groups and require minimal preparation.

Craft activities (ages 3–12):

  • Making Eid cards with crescent moon and lantern motifs using coloured card and stickers
  • Decorating Eid envelopes for Eidi (cash gift envelopes)
  • Paper lantern (fanous) crafts — particularly popular in Egyptian-heritage communities
  • Making a Ramadan/Eid countdown chain in the final days of Ramadan
  • Henna hand designs for older children using ready-made henna cones

Family activities on Eid day:

  • Attending Eid prayer as a family, including young children
  • Visiting grandparents and extended family
  • Preparing traditional Eid breakfast together (sheer khurma, dates, sweets)
  • Taking coordinated Eid family photographs
  • Distributing Zakat al-Fitr together as a family, explaining the meaning to children
  • Visiting community Eid fairs, which many mosques and Islamic centres host in the afternoon

Eid al-Fitr 2026: Frequently Asked Questions

When does Eid al-Fitr 2026 start and end?

Eid al-Fitr 2026 begins at sundown on Thursday, March 19, 2026, and is primarily observed on Friday, March 20, 2026. Celebrations continue for two to three days in most countries, with Sunday, March 22, 2026, being the final day of the formal holiday in many Muslim-majority nations. The exact start depends on the local confirmation of the Shawwal crescent moon, and a one-day variation (Saturday, March 21, as the primary day) remains possible in some countries.

Can you fast on the day of Eid al-Fitr?

Fasting on the day of Eid al-Fitr is strictly prohibited (haram). It is one of five days in the Islamic calendar on which fasting is forbidden: the two Eid days and the three Days of Tashreeq (the 11th, 12th, and 13th of Dhul Hijjah). The Prophet Muhammad (ﷺ) explicitly forbade fasting on Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha (Sahih Muslim, Hadith 1138). Eating before Eid prayer — specifically an odd number of dates — is an established Sunnah.

What is the difference between Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha?

Eid al-Fitr marks the end of Ramadan fasting; Eid al-Adha commemorates Prophet Ibrahim’s willingness to sacrifice his son and coincides with the Hajj pilgrimage. The two differ in religious occasion, timing, duration, and required acts. Eid al-Adha 2026 falls on Wednesday, May 27, 2026 (projected, subject to moon sighting), approximately 70 days after Eid al-Fitr. The obligatory charity for Eid al-Fitr is Zakat al-Fitr; for Eid al-Adha, it is the Udhiyah (Qurbani) animal sacrifice, obligatory on those with the nisab threshold of wealth.

What do you say to someone on Eid al-Fitr?

The universal greeting is “Eid Mubarak” (Blessed Eid). The traditional Islamic response is “Taqabbal Allahu Minna Wa Minkum” (May Allah accept from us and from you). Non-Muslims may use “Eid Mubarak” without any concern — it is always appropriate and appreciated. Do not say “Happy Ramadan” on Eid day; Ramadan is the month that ends before Eid begins.

Is Eid al-Fitr a public holiday in the US?

Eid al-Fitr is not a US federal public holiday. It is not on the list of federal holidays established by 5 U.S.C. § 6103. However, it is recognised as an official school holiday in several major districts — including New York City (NYC DOE), Dearborn, Detroit, Philadelphia, and multiple districts in Maryland, Virginia, and New Jersey. Federal and state employees may request Eid al-Fitr as a religious accommodation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which requires employers to provide reasonable accommodation for sincerely held religious observances.

What is Zakat al-Fitr, and how much is it in 2026?

Zakat al-Fitr is a mandatory per-person charity payment due before Eid prayer, obligatory on every Muslim who has food beyond their immediate needs. In 2026, the amount is approximately $15–$20 USD, £5–£7 GBP, or CAD $20–$25 per person, calculated as the monetary equivalent of 2.5 kg of a staple grain. It must be paid for every dependent in one’s household. Payment after the Eid prayer is valid as voluntary charity, but no longer fulfils the Zakat al-Fitr obligation. Consult your local mosque or an organisation such as Islamic Relief, the Fiqh Council of North America, or the National Zakat Foundation (UK) for the confirmed local amount for 2026.

How do I perform Eid prayer?

Eid prayer consists of two rakat with additional Takbeer, performed between sunrise and midday on Eid day. In the first rakat, after the opening Takbeer, say between three and seven additional Takbeer (depending on madhab) before reciting Al-Fatiha and a second surah. In the second rakat, say three to five additional Takbeer after standing from prostration, then recite Al-Fatiha and a surah before completing the rakat. Prayer is followed by the Eid sermon (khutbah). Attend a local mosque, Islamic centre, or open prayer ground. Women and children are encouraged to attend. Confirm your mosque’s specific format, as minor differences exist between the four major madhabs.

What do Muslims eat on Eid al-Fitr?

Muslims traditionally eat an odd number of dates before Eid prayer. After prayer, families share a festive meal. Specific dishes vary by region: sheer khurma (Pakistan, India, Bangladesh), kahk (Egypt), maamoul (Levant, Gulf), baklava (Turkey, Balkans), rendang and ketupat (Indonesia, Malaysia), and biryani across South Asia and the Gulf. Sweets and pastries are present in virtually every culture’s Eid tradition. The festive meal typically takes place at home with extended family.

Preparing for Eid al-Fitr 2026: A Complete Checklist

Before Eid al-Fitr 2026 on Friday, March 20, the following obligations and preparations apply:

Religious obligations:

  • [ ] Pay Zakat al-Fitr for yourself and all dependants before the Eid prayer begins on March 20
  • [ ] Confirm Eid prayer time and location with your local mosque
  • [ ] Perform ghusl (ritual bath) on Eid morning before prayer
  • [ ] Eat an odd number of dates before attending prayer

Practical preparation:

  • [ ] Check whether your child’s school is closed on March 20 — verify on the district’s official website
  • [ ] Submit a religious accommodation request to your employer if needed before March 18
  • [ ] Prepare or purchase Eid gifts and Eidi for children
  • [ ] Prepare or purchase traditional Eid food, sweets, or a gift hamper for family
  • [ ] Lay out new or best clothes for Eid morning

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