In a historical precedent that even those who once dominated the Arab and Islamic world did not envisage, the UAE changes Friday prayer timing. The decision has been met with rejection from religious scholars, who affirm that prayer times are fixed by explicit Islamic legal texts. In Islamic law, each prayer is bound to a defined and divinely prescribed time, which renders any alteration a matter that naturally provokes serious fiqh-related questions. Despite the gravity of this shift, no formal legal or jurisprudential ruling endorsing the change has been issued by recognised Emirati religious bodies to date.
The General Authority of Islamic Affairs, Endowments, and Zakat in the UAE announced that the congregational Friday prayer will be held in all mosques at 12:45 pm, effective from Friday, 2 January 2026. This represents a departure from the long established practice of holding the prayer at approximately 1:15 pm. The announcement effectively standardises the new timing nationwide, transforming what was historically tied to religious parameters into an administratively defined schedule.
Religious Objections and Jurisprudential Concerns
Islamic scholars have consistently maintained that prayer times are not subject to administrative discretion or societal convenience. They argue that the fixed nature of prayer timings is established by clear Islamic legal texts, making any modification a sensitive issue that cannot be detached from religious authority. From this perspective, the change raises unresolved jurisprudential concerns, particularly in the absence of a transparent and authoritative religious justification.
The lack of an officially issued fiqh based position addressing these concerns has further intensified the debate. The silence of formal religious institutions on the legal implications of the change leaves unanswered questions about the boundaries between religious obligations and state driven decision making.
Official Justification and Lifestyle Framing
The Chairman of the Authority, Dr Omar Habtoor Al Darei, stated that the decision followed a study that lasted nearly four years. He explained that the move was motivated by what he described as purely social considerations, with the stated aim of reinforcing family cohesion and encouraging positive interaction with the realities of Emirati society. The Friday prayer, according to this framing, is treated as a social gathering point rather than an act of worship bound by immutable religious timing.
Officials further clarified that advancing the prayer time carries no religious rationale and is instead intended to align with prevailing daily lifestyle patterns. This explicit separation of the decision from religious reasoning has drawn further scrutiny, as it places societal convenience at the forefront of a matter traditionally governed by Islamic law.
Support the Voice of the Ummah
Our Website don’t survive without you.
Your donation fuels every word and every truth shared.
Click here to Donate & Fund your Islamic Independent Platform








