Eid al-Fitr 1451 AH · The Festival of Breaking the Fast, celebrating the end of Ramadan.
Predicted Date
Monday, February 4, 2030
Based on Makkah. Actual dates may vary by 1-2 days depending on local crescent moon sighting in your region.
| City | Country | Predicted Date | Confidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Makkah | Saudi Arabia | Mon, Feb 4, 2030 | 77% Very Likely |
| Dubai | UAE | Mon, Feb 4, 2030 | 75% Very Likely |
| Istanbul | Turkey | Mon, Feb 4, 2030 | After 30 days |
| London | United Kingdom | Mon, Feb 4, 2030 | After 30 days |
| Cairo | North Africa | Mon, Feb 4, 2030 | 90% Very Likely |
| Lagos | West Africa | Mon, Feb 4, 2030 | 85% Very Likely |
| Jakarta | Indonesia | Tue, Feb 5, 2030 | After 30 days |
| Kuala Lumpur | Malaysia | Tue, Feb 5, 2030 | After 30 days |
| New Delhi | India | Mon, Feb 4, 2030 | 81% Very Likely |
| Karachi | Pakistan | Mon, Feb 4, 2030 | 80% Very Likely |
| Dhaka | Bangladesh | Mon, Feb 4, 2030 | 50% Possible |
| New York City | United States | Mon, Feb 4, 2030 | After 30 days |
| Los Angeles | United States | Mon, Feb 4, 2030 | After 30 days |
| Toronto | Canada | Mon, Feb 4, 2030 | After 30 days |
| Sydney | Australia | Tue, Feb 5, 2030 | After 30 days |
Saudi Arabia · Mon, Feb 4, 2030
UAE · Mon, Feb 4, 2030
Turkey · Mon, Feb 4, 2030
United Kingdom · Mon, Feb 4, 2030
North Africa · Mon, Feb 4, 2030
West Africa · Mon, Feb 4, 2030
Indonesia · Tue, Feb 5, 2030
Malaysia · Tue, Feb 5, 2030
India · Mon, Feb 4, 2030
Pakistan · Mon, Feb 4, 2030
Bangladesh · Mon, Feb 4, 2030
United States · Mon, Feb 4, 2030
United States · Mon, Feb 4, 2030
Canada · Mon, Feb 4, 2030
Australia · Tue, Feb 5, 2030
Confidence reflects the likelihood of crescent moon visibility on the evening before the predicted date. Higher confidence means stronger astronomical conditions for sighting.
View detailed moon sighting predictions and astronomical parameters for your city.
Eid al-Fitr (the Festival of Breaking the Fast) marks the end of Ramadan and the beginning of Shawwal, the 10th month of the Islamic calendar. It is one of the two major Islamic holidays (the other being Eid al-Adha).
The celebration begins with a special congregational prayer (Salat al-Eid) performed in the morning. Muslims dress in their finest clothes, give charitable donations (Zakat al-Fitr), and gather with family and friends for festive meals.
Eid al-Fitr falls on the 1st of Shawwal and is determined by the sighting of the new crescent moon after the completion of Ramadan. The date varies by 1-2 days across different countries depending on local moon sighting conditions.
Predictions are based on astronomical calculations using NASA JPL DE421 ephemeris data combined with a machine learning model (Random Forest) trained on over 2,000 historical crescent moon sighting observations. The model evaluates five key parameters — moonset lag, moon age, altitude, elongation, and illumination — to produce a confidence score for crescent visibility at each location.