Islamic Date Today Apps & Tools
Check the Islamic date wherever you are, on the web, in your browser, or on your phone. Every official platform shares the same Hijri date data.
IslamicDate.today is available through a set of official tools and apps, all built on the same reference data and method. Whether you prefer the website, a quick browser check, or an app on your phone, you’ll see a consistent Islamic date across every one.
Get the apps and extensions
Android App
View the current Islamic date and browse the Hijri calendar on the go. Free on the Google Play Store.
Get it on Google PlayChrome Extension
Check today’s Hijri date straight from your browser toolbar. Free on the Chrome Web Store.
Add to ChromeEdge Add-on
The same quick date check for Microsoft Edge. Free on the Edge Add-ons store.
Add to EdgeOpen Data on GitHub
Machine-readable Hijri datasets, methodology, and reference tools for developers and researchers.
View on GitHubWebsite tools
The website is the heart of the project. Alongside today’s date, it includes a full set of free tools and clear explanations of how Islamic dates are determined and why they vary by region. Jump straight to any of them:
Browser extensions
If you spend your day in a browser, the official extensions put the Islamic date one click away in your toolbar, no need to open the site. They’re published on the recognised stores for Chrome and Microsoft Edge and maintained as part of the same project, so they stay in step with the website.
Mobile application
The official Android app on the Google Play Store gives you the current Islamic date and the Hijri calendar on your phone. It uses the same reference data as the website, so the date you see on mobile matches what you’d see on the desktop, handy for checking quickly while you’re out.
Open data and documentation
For developers and researchers, the project keeps a public, open-source repository on GitHub. It holds machine-readable Islamic and Hijri date datasets, descriptions of the methodology, technical definitions, and example implementations. If you want to build the Hijri date into your own software, or just understand exactly how the data is produced, that’s where to look.
One project, every platform in sync
All of these, the website, extensions, app, and open data, are part of the same IslamicDate.today project, linked together for transparency. Each one is a different doorway to the same underlying reference information, so you can pick whichever fits your device and trust that the date stays consistent across all of them.
Important: IslamicDate.today is a technical, reference-based project. It does not issue religious rulings and does not replace your local religious authority. Islamic dates can vary by country, authority, and method, so for the confirmed start of Ramadan, the Eids, and Hajj, follow your local announcement. All tools and data here are for information and reference.