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Laylat al-Qadr Last Ten Nights Planning Guide

A practical guide to planning the last ten nights of Ramadan with calendar uncertainty, source boundaries and private worship routines in mind.

Data updated July 4, 2026 at 01:21 PMlaylat-al-qadrramadanlast-ten-nightsquranislamic-calendar
Laylat al-Qadr Last Ten Nights Planning Guide

Source anchor

Quran 97:1-5

Planning marker

Commonly mapped to 27 Ramadan, but prepare the last ten nights

Boundary

Local Ramadan dates can shift by moon sighting

Laylat al-Qadr planning should keep two truths together: Quran 97 gives the strongest source anchor for the night, while ordinary calendar pages can only help readers organize the last ten nights. A site calendar should not pretend to identify the night with certainty for every community.

Use the Muslim Post Ramadan and Islamic Calendar pages to mark the expected last ten nights, then confirm local Ramadan dates through the mosque or authority you follow. The common 27 Ramadan event page is useful as a planning marker, but the strongest practical workflow is to prepare for the whole last-ten-night window.

A good plan is small and repeatable: protect rest, note prayer and Quran reading goals, prepare a short dua list, and avoid turning private worship into a public performance. If local announcements shift Ramadan by one day, update the plan rather than treating the original calendar as final.

Last Ten Nights Planning Checklist

StepWhat to planWhy it helpsBoundary
Date windowMark the expected last ten nights.It protects the full search window.Do not rely only on one civil date.
Local confirmationCheck mosque or authority announcements.Ramadan start can shift the final nights.Follow the calendar authority you normally follow.
Private routinePrepare prayer, Quran reading and dua goals.Small routines survive tired nights.Do not make private worship a public score.
Update planAdjust if local Ramadan dates change.It keeps the plan aligned with community practice.A planning page is not a final announcement.

FAQ

Does the calendar prove the exact night of Laylat al-Qadr?

No. The calendar helps you plan the last ten nights. Local Ramadan dates and community practice still matter.

Should I only focus on 27 Ramadan?

Treat 27 Ramadan as a useful planning marker, but prepare for the wider last-ten-night window.

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