Sobre los horarios de oración en Cartagena
Cartagena, en la Región de Murcia, cuenta con una comunidad musulmana atendida por mezquitas y centros islámicos locales. Los horarios diarios de oración aquí se calculan utilizando el estándar de la Liga Mundial Musulmana, la convención adoptada por la Federación Española de Entidades Religiosas Islámicas (FEERI). Adhan Salaty publica los horarios de Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib e Isha para Cartagena cada día, actualizados automáticamente desde el motor de cálculo de código abierto Aladhan.
How prayer times are calculated for Cartagena
We compute prayer times for Cartagena from the city's geographic centre at latitude 37.6000°N, longitude -0.9990°W, using the Muslim World League (Fajr 18°, Isha 17°) method. That is the convention used by the Federación Española de Entidades Religiosas Islámicas (FEERI) and the Comisión Islámica de España and by most mosques across Spain, so the times you see here usually line up with what local Cartagena mosques announce as the start of each prayer.
Each calculation depends on where the sun sits relative to Cartagena's horizon at any given moment. Fajr begins when the sun reaches 18 degrees below the eastern horizon at dawn. Sunrise is the moment the upper edge of the sun first crosses the horizon. Dhuhr is true solar noon for Cartagena's longitude, with a one-minute settling adjustment. Asr uses the standard shadow rule: the prayer starts when an object's shadow equals its own height plus the residual noon shadow. Maghrib starts at sunset, and Isha starts when the sun drops to 17 degrees below the western horizon at dusk. We pull fresh values from the Aladhan API every day and cache them for 24 hours per city.
Daylight and Ramadan in Cartagena
Cartagena sits at a lower mid-northern latitude (37.60°N), so daylight changes noticeably with the season. On the summer solstice in late June, Cartagena gets about 14 hours 36 minutes of daylight. On the winter solstice in late December, that drops to roughly 9 hours 24 minutes. The annual swing is close to 5 hours 12 minutes, and that gap is what shapes the daily fasting window in Ramadan.
When Ramadan falls in summer, as it last did in 2014–2017 and will again in 2042–2045, Muslims in Cartagena fast from Fajr to Maghrib for close to 13 hours 36 minutes. When Ramadan falls in winter, as it will in 2027–2030, the window shrinks to roughly 8 hours 54 minutes. The next Ramadan (1448 AH, starting around 15 February 2027) falls in late winter for Cartagena, so fasting days are moderate to short. In northern Spain Isha can fall after 23:00 in late June, and Fajr arrives before 04:30: that is what summer Ramadan tends to look like in Spain.
Iqamah practice and congregational prayer in Cartagena
Adhan Salaty publishes calculated adhan times: the moment each prayer's astronomical window opens. Mosques in Cartagena publish iqamah times instead, which sit a few minutes after the adhan to give worshippers time to arrive and prepare. Most Spanish mosques wait 20 to 30 minutes after the Fajr adhan before iqamah, and 10 to 15 minutes for the four daytime prayers. Maghrib iqamah is shorter, often only 5 to 10 minutes after the adhan, because the Maghrib window itself is brief and the prayer has to finish before Isha starts.
Practice varies between mosques even inside Cartagena, depending on community tradition and what the congregation prefers. Each major mosque publishes its own iqamah schedule on its noticeboard and website, and two Cartagena mosques can differ by ten or fifteen minutes for the same prayer. For congregational prayer, defer to your local mosque's published iqamah times rather than the calculated adhan times shown here. For private prayer at home or while travelling, the calculated adhan times on this page are accurate to within a minute.
Friday prayer (Jumu'ah) in Cartagena
Friday prayer (Yumu'a) usually happens between 14:00 and 15:00, depending on the season. In Cartagena, the Jumu'ah service replaces the Friday Dhuhr for anyone who attends in congregation. It is a two-part khutbah followed by two cycles of congregational prayer, and the full service usually runs 30 to 45 minutes from the first khutbah to the end of prayer.
Cartagena's main congregation is at the city's central mosque. Larger Spanish mosques in city-centre locations often run several Jumu'ah sittings so office workers can attend; the first sitting starts close to Dhuhr and a second sitting follows roughly 45 minutes later. Khutbah language varies by mosque. In Cartagena most of the sermon is usually delivered in English, with the formal opening, Quranic recitation and supplication in Arabic. Some mosques add portions in community languages such as Urdu, Bengali, Arabic, Somali or Turkish.
Halal food and community in Cartagena
Cartagena has a growing halal food scene with Maghrebi, sub-Saharan, Arab, Pakistani and Turkish kitchens, plus Spanish halal certification through Instituto Halal: restaurants, butchers and grocery stores selling halal-certified meat under recognised certification bodies. With a metropolitan population of about 213,943, Cartagena's halal scene clusters around mosques and historically Muslim residential neighbourhoods, with newer halal-friendly chains opening in city-centre and suburban shopping districts.
Beyond food, Cartagena's Muslim community is supported by Islamic schools, weekend madrasas, charities running zakat and food bank programmes, and sister-city links to communities elsewhere in the Muslim world. Adhan Salaty does not keep a directory of these resources. For specific community services, contact the institutions listed in the mosques section above; they usually maintain or signpost what's available locally.
Visiting Cartagena and praying as a traveller
If you're visiting Cartagena, you can use Adhan Salaty to plan prayer times during the trip. The five daily prayers stay obligatory wherever you are. The times shown on this page apply to the city centre and immediate surroundings; geographic variation inside the metropolitan area is under a minute, well within standard observance precision. The city's time zone is Europe/Madrid, which Adhan Salaty handles automatically through the Aladhan API.
Islamic jurisprudence allows travellers to combine and shorten certain prayers (qasr and jam'). Dhuhr and Asr can be combined and shortened to two cycles each, and Maghrib (still three cycles) can be combined with Isha (shortened to two). The threshold distance and travel circumstances that trigger these dispensations vary between schools of thought. Mosques in Cartagena are used to serving travelling Muslims and welcome visitors at all five congregational prayers and at Jumu'ah on Fridays.