Laylatul Qadr odd nights dates: last 10 nights date mapper
The last 10 nights arrive like a wave.
You feel it in the masjid, in the quiet streets, in the way people suddenly speak softer.
Then the practical questions start: “Which night is 27?” “Is tonight odd?” “What’s the Gregorian date?” In Arabic it becomes: الليالي الوترية, ليالي الوتر, and the famous one people repeat: ليلة ٢٧ رمضان.
This page is for that exact moment. It maps the odd nights (21, 23, 25, 27, 29) into clear dates so you can plan worship without calendar chaos.
✅ TL;DR – Laylatul Qadr odd nights dates
Use this mapper to get the Laylatul Qadr odd nights dates for the last 10 nights: 21, 23, 25, 27, 29. It turns Ramadan nights into a clear schedule you can copy and share, so you spend less time arguing about dates and more time worshipping.
Odd nights only
| Night # | Hijri date (day Ramadan) | Gregorian date (for Night start) | Odd? | Notes |
|---|
what “odd nights” means (the easiest way to picture it)
Odd nights are the 21st, 23rd, 25th, 27th, and 29th nights of Ramadan. Picture Ramadan like a long staircase. The last 10 steps matter a lot, and the “odd” steps are the ones you mark with a sticky note so you don’t miss them.
That’s it.
No drama needed.
why people get confused every year (and it’s not your fault)
The confusion usually comes from date mapping. People want to match a Hijri night with a Gregorian date, and they want it instantly. But Ramadan nights start after Maghrib, and different places may start Ramadan on different days. So the same “night number” might land on a different Gregorian date depending on where you are.
Micro-scenario: someone says, “Tonight is the 27th!” Another replies, “No, that’s tomorrow!” Both might be speaking from different calendars or different locations.
how this date mapper works (what you’ll get)
You enter the Ramadan start date for your year, and it generates a clean schedule for nights 21, 23, 25, 27, and 29. Then you can copy it, save it, and share it without re-checking five times.
(Human aside: I’ve seen families waste half the night debating dates. It’s like arguing about the frame while the picture is right there.)
what to remember about “night” timing
A “Ramadan night” is the night after Maghrib. So when you read a date on a calendar, always think: “Is this referring to after Maghrib tonight?” That small detail solves a lot of confusion.
Micro-scenario: you plan worship “Friday night” but you mean “Friday after Maghrib.” That’s usually the correct way people speak about these nights.
night 21, 23, 25, 27, 29: the schedule people look for
Most people searching “night 21 23 25 27 29” just want a clear list. They want a table or a copyable schedule so they can plan rest, work, and worship.
And yes, many people ask: متى ليلة ٢٧ and متى ليلة ٢٧ رمضان بالتاريخ الميلادي؟ This tool answers the “date” part. Worship is still your part.
what to do if your community starts ramadan on a different day
If your local community started Ramadan on a different day, your odd nights shift with it. This is exactly why the mapper exists. Don’t fight your uncle over a WhatsApp forward. Just use the correct start day for your location and generate your schedule.
Micro-scenario: you’re traveling and you want to keep pace with the local masjid. Use the local start day and follow the community for Taraweeh and Qiyam.
how to plan the last 10 nights without burning out
The goal isn’t to “win” five nights and collapse. It’s to show up steadily. Here’s a simple approach I tell beginners: protect sleep enough to keep worship alive, then add extra focus on the odd nights.
- Every night: a small portion of Qur’an + sincere du‘a.
- Odd nights: longer du‘a, extra charity if you can, a bit more night prayer.
- One anchor: don’t miss Fajr the next morning.
five quirky beginner mistakes (and quick fixes)
These are the mistakes that repeat every Ramadan like clockwork. Fix them once and you’ll feel calmer.
Mistake 1: Thinking “odd night” means the odd Gregorian date. Quick fix: odd nights are the night numbers in Ramadan (21/23/25/27/29).
Mistake 2: Forgetting that nights start after Maghrib. Quick fix: plan your odd night worship after Maghrib.
Mistake 3: Copying a schedule from another country. Quick fix: generate your own schedule based on your start day.
Mistake 4: Treating ليلة ٢٧ like “the only night that matters.” Quick fix: take the whole last 10 nights seriously, with extra focus on the odd nights.
Mistake 5: Staying up all night and then missing Fajr. Quick fix: pace yourself—protect Fajr first.
a short story of a beginner mistake (and the simple fix)
A young brother once told me, “I keep missing the odd nights because I’m never sure which one it is.”
He’d wait for someone to message him.
Sometimes the message came late. Sometimes it didn’t come at all.
So we made a simple schedule from his local Ramadan start day and pinned it on his phone.
He said, “Now I don’t chase announcements. I’m ready.”
That’s the point: remove the confusion, keep the worship.
quick checklist before the last 10 nights start
Do this once, then stop worrying: confirm your local Ramadan start day, generate the odd nights schedule, and copy it somewhere you’ll actually see.
- Confirm: local Ramadan start day (don’t assume).
- Generate: odd nights 21/23/25/27/29.
- Copy: the schedule into notes or share with family.
differences of opinion (kept respectful)
Muslims differ on how to speak about “which night is most likely,” and many people give extra attention to certain nights like the 27th. Keep it respectful. The safest approach is to take all the last 10 nights seriously and focus strongly on the odd nights.
ending: don’t let the calendar steal your worship
Dates are tools.
Worship is the goal.
Map your Laylatul Qadr odd nights dates, then show up with humility—night after night.
📊 odd nights in the last 10: what the mapper outputs
This table shows the five odd nights and what you’ll receive from the schedule generator.
🌙 Show Odd Nights Table
| Ramadan night | What people call it | What you copy/share |
|---|---|---|
| Night 21 | Start of odd nights focus | Gregorian date + “after Maghrib” note |
| Night 23 | Second odd night | Date line you can paste |
| Night 25 | Mid odd night | Copyable schedule entry |
| Night 27 | Often highlighted (ليلة ٢٧) | Gregorian date mapping for your location |
| Night 29 | Last odd night | Final schedule entry |
📘 Laylatul Qadr odd nights dates FAQs
what are the odd nights in ramadan?
Show Answer
The odd nights in the last 10 are usually counted as nights 21, 23, 25, 27, and 29 (الليالي الوترية).
how do i find laylatul qadr odd nights dates in gregorian?
Show Answer
Use a mapper based on the local Ramadan start day. It outputs the Gregorian dates for nights 21/23/25/27/29 for your location.
is night 27 always laylatul qadr?
Show Answer
Many people give special attention to night 27, but the safest practice is to take all the last 10 nights seriously and focus on the odd nights.
why do odd nights dates change each year?
Show Answer
Because Ramadan is based on the lunar calendar, and mapping Hijri nights to Gregorian dates shifts year to year.
do odd nights start after maghrib?
Show Answer
Yes. A Ramadan “night” is generally the night after Maghrib, which is why planning should focus on “after Maghrib tonight.”
what if my country started ramadan on a different day?
Show Answer
Your odd nights shift with your start day. Use the local start day and generate a schedule for your community.
can i copy the schedule and share it on whatsapp?
Show Answer
Yes. The goal is to create a clean list you can copy (نسخ المواعيد) and share with family or groups.
what does “الليالي الوترية” mean?
Show Answer
It means “the odd-numbered nights,” commonly referring to 21, 23, 25, 27, and 29 in the last 10 nights of Ramadan.
what is the easiest plan for the last 10 nights?
Show Answer
Do a small amount every night, and increase worship on the odd nights. Protect Fajr and don’t burn out early.
how do i stop arguing about dates with family?
Show Answer
Use one local start date, generate one shared schedule, and agree that “night” means after Maghrib. Then focus on worship.
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