For Muslims living in the UK, the variation in Fajr time can be startling. In late June, Fajr in London falls around 02:40 AM. By late December, the same calculation gives a Fajr of approximately 06:20 AM. That's a difference of nearly four hours for the same prayer at the same latitude — and the variation is even more extreme in Scotland. Here's why.
The Earth's axial tilt
The Earth's axis is tilted at 23.5° relative to its orbital plane around the Sun. In summer, the northern hemisphere tilts towards the Sun, which rises high in the sky, stays up longer, and sets further north of due west. In winter, the tilt is reversed: the Sun is lower, days are short, and nights are long. This tilt is the sole cause of the dramatic seasonal variation in prayer times at northern latitudes.
Why Fajr is the most affected prayer
Fajr begins when the Sun is 18° below the horizon (astronomical dawn). In summer, the Sun doesn't set very far below the horizon — it dips to perhaps 5–10° below at midnight. It then rises rapidly, meaning the 18° threshold is crossed very quickly, very early. In winter, the Sun descends steeply and spends many hours below 18°, making Fajr much later.
The UK's extreme latitude
London sits at 51.5°N — comparable to Southern Canada. Edinburgh is at 55.9°N. At these latitudes, the seasonal variation in day length is already dramatic (from 8 hours in December to 17 hours in June in London). Isha and Fajr, which are defined by 17° and 18° solar depression respectively, are the most sensitive to this variation because twilight itself barely disappears on long summer nights.
The white night problem in Scotland
At latitudes above roughly 54°N (including much of Scotland and Northern England in summer), the astronomical condition for Isha — Sun 17° below the horizon — is never fully met between May and July. Twilight glows in the north all night. This creates what scholars call the 'high latitude problem'. There are several scholarly solutions, including angle-based approximation and using times from a reference latitude. Most UK mosques follow the Wifaqul Ulama guidance for their local area.
What this means practically for UK Muslims
In summer:
- Fajr can be before 3:00 AM in London and before 2:30 AM in Edinburgh — many Muslims set an alarm
- Isha can be as late as 23:30, meaning some Muslims pray Isha just before going to bed
- The gap between Isha and Fajr may be only 2–3 hours
- During Ramadan in summer, the fasting day can exceed 19 hours
In winter:
- Fajr is around 06:00–06:30 in London — often after most people have woken up
- Maghrib is around 15:50–16:00 — before many finish work
- The total fasting day in winter Ramadan is approximately 8–10 hours
Tips for summer Fajr
- Use an app or this site with daily automatic calculations — never rely on a printed timetable for more than a week
- Set multiple alarms; consider sleeping after Isha rather than before midnight
- The Sunnah of sleeping after Dhuhr (qaylulah) becomes particularly valuable in summer
- Many UK mosques shift to a later approximated Fajr in deep summer — check with your local mosque