Traveling to Greece During Ramadan: Complete Guide

Fasting in Greece isn’t like fasting in Muslim-majority countries. There’s no Ramadan cannon, no communal iftar tents, no shops closing for prayers. The country continues as if it’s any other month.

But after fasting seven Ramadans in Athens, I’ve learned it’s not just possible – it can be meaningful. The challenge of maintaining ibadah in a non-Muslim country deepens the experience. The small Muslim community comes together. The quiet iftars in hotel rooms become precious.

Here’s how to make Ramadan travel in Greece work.

Fasting Hours in Greece

Greece’s latitude means fasting hours vary significantly by season.

Summer Ramadan (June-August)

The Challenge: Long fasting days

Month Fajr (Fast Begins) Maghrib (Fast Ends) Fasting Hours
June ~4:00 AM ~8:45 PM ~16.5 hours
July ~4:15 AM ~8:40 PM ~16.5 hours
August ~4:45 AM ~8:15 PM ~15.5 hours

Reality check: Summer Ramadan in Greece means very long fasts. Combined with heat (30-38°C), this is physically demanding.

Winter Ramadan (December-February)

The Advantage: Shorter fasting days

Month Fajr (Fast Begins) Maghrib (Fast Ends) Fasting Hours
December ~6:15 AM ~5:00 PM ~10.5 hours
January ~6:30 AM ~5:15 PM ~11 hours
February ~6:00 AM ~5:45 PM ~12 hours

Winter Ramadan is significantly easier for fasting, though Greece is less appealing for tourism (cold, some islands closed).

Spring/Autumn Ramadan

Month Fajr Maghrib Fasting Hours
March ~5:30 AM ~6:30 PM ~13 hours
April ~5:00 AM ~8:00 PM ~15 hours
September ~5:45 AM ~7:30 PM ~14 hours
October ~6:15 AM ~6:45 PM ~12.5 hours

Spring and autumn offer the best balance of manageable fasting hours and pleasant weather.

Suhoor (Pre-Dawn Meal) Options

Suhoor is the biggest challenge. Greece has no 24-hour halal restaurants. No pre-dawn kebab shops.

Hotel Room Suhoor

What works:
– Stock your room from halal grocery stores (Athens: Al-Baraka Market)
– Items that don’t need cooking: cheese, bread, dates, yogurt, fruit
– Request a mini-fridge or room with kitchenette

My suhoor staples:
– Greek yogurt with honey (filling, protein-rich)
– Feta cheese with olives
– Fresh bread (from bakery the day before)
– Dates
– Bananas
– Water, water, water

Tip: Set multiple alarms. Suhoor at 4 AM after a late iftar is hard. Your body isn’t used to this schedule.

Hotel Breakfast Adaptation

Some hotels offer early breakfast. If your hotel opens at 6:30 AM and Fajr is at 6:00 AM, you’ll miss suhoor at the restaurant.

Strategy: Ask at check-in if they can prepare a takeaway breakfast box the night before. Better hotels will accommodate this.

Apartment/Airbnb Suhoor

Self-catering accommodation is ideal for Ramadan:
– Full kitchen access
– Cook proper suhoor (eggs, etc.)
– No need to explain to hotel staff
– Flexibility with timing

Iftar (Breaking Fast) Options

Athens: Best Options

Athens Mosque Community Iftar
– During Ramadan, the mosque organizes daily iftar
– Basic but communal (dates, water, simple meal)
– Contact mosque to confirm dates and participation
– Location: Al Salam Mosque, Votanikos

Halal Restaurants

Restaurants that understand Ramadan and will serve you at sunset:

Sultan Turkish Restaurant
– Will serve at exact Maghrib time
– Call ahead to reserve and explain
– Offers special iftar platters during Ramadan

Damascus Restaurant
– Syrian-owned, understands Ramadan
– Iftar-appropriate meals
– Communal atmosphere during Ramadan

Al-Madina Restaurant
– Egyptian community restaurant
– Understands iftar needs
– Simple but satisfying

Mehran Pakistani Restaurant
– Biryani special on Fridays
– Understands fasting schedule

Hotel Room Iftar

Stock these for hotel iftar:
– Dates (essential)
– Water and juice
– Fruit
– Cheese and bread
– Pre-ordered room service (if halal options available)
– Takeaway from halal restaurant

Our routine: Break fast in room with dates and water, pray Maghrib, then go to restaurant for full meal if desired.

Restaurant Iftar Tips

When eating iftar at restaurants:

  1. Reserve in advance and mention Ramadan timing
  2. Order before Maghrib so food arrives at breaking time
  3. Explain to staff – most Greeks are unfamiliar with Ramadan
  4. Tip well – staff are accommodating your unusual schedule

Phrase to use: “We are fasting for Ramadan. Can we please order now and have the food served at [Maghrib time]?”

Prayer During Ramadan

Taraweeh Prayers

Athens Mosque holds Taraweeh prayers nightly during Ramadan:
– Start time: 30 minutes after Isha
– Duration: 1.5-2 hours typically
– Full 20 rakaat

Masjid Al-Noor also offers Taraweeh in a smaller, more intimate setting.

Outside Athens: Hotel room prayers. Consider praying Taraweeh at home/hotel if no mosque accessible.

Jummah During Ramadan

Friday prayers continue as normal. Ramadan Jummah at Athens Mosque is especially crowded. Arrive 45+ minutes early.

Managing Prayer and Sightseeing

Summer Ramadan challenge: Fajr at 4 AM, then activities all day while fasting, Maghrib at 8:45 PM, Taraweeh until 11 PM. Exhausting.

My advice:
– Reduce sightseeing intensity during Ramadan
– Focus on spiritual experience, not tourist checklist
– Rest during hottest hours (11 AM – 4 PM)
– Save energy-intensive activities for after iftar
– Consider: Is intense tourism during Ramadan the right choice?

Island Travel During Ramadan

Can You Do Islands During Ramadan?

Honest assessment: Islands are harder.

Challenges:
– No mosques (except Rhodes)
– No halal restaurants (mostly)
– No iftar community
– Limited suhoor options

If you must do islands:
– Book accommodation with kitchen
– Stock up on supplies before ferry
– Plan for hotel room iftars
– Accept a more isolated Ramadan experience

Rhodes: Best Island for Ramadan

Rhodes has an active mosque (Ibrahim Pasha). We spent part of Ramadan there:

What worked:
– Prayed at the mosque
– Broke fast at Nireas Restaurant (Turkish, understood Ramadan)
– Small but welcoming community

What was challenging:
– No organized community iftar
– Limited suhoor options
– Quieter than Athens

Practical Ramadan Travel Tips

Packing for Ramadan

Essential:
– Dates (bring from home or buy at Al-Baraka in Athens)
– Prayer mat
– Quran app or mushaf
– Reusable water bottle
– Modest clothing for mosque
– Alarm clock (backup for phone)

Useful:
– Instant soup packets (easy suhoor)
– Energy bars (halal-certified)
– Electrolyte packets (for summer heat)

Managing Energy While Fasting

Summer fasting in Greece is demanding. Here’s how to manage:

Morning (after Fajr):
– Light activity possible
– Indoor museums (air-conditioned)
– Avoid direct sun

Midday to afternoon:
– Rest period
– Stay in shade or indoors
– This is siesta time in Greece anyway

Late afternoon:
– Resume light activity
– Evening sightseeing as iftar approaches
– Stay hydrated (mentally prepare for iftar)

After iftar:
– Hydrate thoroughly
– Eat moderately (don’t overeat)
– Taraweeh if mosque accessible
– Sleep early for suhoor

Dealing with Questions

Greeks are curious but unfamiliar with Ramadan. Common questions:

“Why aren’t you eating?”
“It’s Ramadan – we fast during daylight hours. Like your Lent, but for a month.”

“Not even water?”
“Not even water. It’s challenging but meaningful.”

“Can I eat in front of you?”
“Yes, please don’t worry. We’re used to it.”

Greeks are generally respectful once you explain. Most have heard of Ramadan but don’t know details.

Health Considerations

Consult your doctor before:
– Traveling during Ramadan if you have health conditions
– Fasting in extreme heat (summer Greece)
– Long flights during fasting hours

If fasting becomes dangerous:
– Islam permits breaking fast for health reasons
– Traveling itself can be an exemption (consult your scholar)
– Your health comes first

Summer heat warnings:
– Dehydration is real risk
– Heat exhaustion is possible
– Don’t push through dangerous symptoms
– Break fast if needed – make up days later

Eid al-Fitr in Greece

If your trip includes Eid:

Athens Mosque Eid Prayer:
– Very crowded – arrive 1+ hour early
– Festive atmosphere
– Bring prayer mat (overflow into courtyard)
– Family-friendly event

After Eid Prayer:
– Community greetings at mosque
– Eid breakfast with family/friends
– Athens halal restaurants are busy (reserve ahead)

Eid on islands:
– No organized prayers
– Pray Eid at hotel/accommodation
– Make it special with nice iftar supplies

Should You Travel to Greece During Ramadan?

Reasons to go:

  • Experience Ramadan in a different context
  • Strengthen spiritual practice through challenge
  • Visit when tourists are fewer (depending on timing)
  • Connect with Greece’s small but warm Muslim community
  • See historical Islamic heritage sites

Reasons to reconsider:

  • Summer Ramadan + Greek heat is genuinely hard
  • Tourist activities conflict with fasting/prayer
  • Limited iftar and suhoor options
  • Miss communal Ramadan atmosphere

My recommendation:

Go if:
– You want a contemplative, challenging Ramadan
– You’re staying primarily in Athens
– It’s winter/spring Ramadan (shorter fasts)
– You have flexible, low-intensity travel plans

Reconsider if:
– You want the full festive Ramadan experience
– It’s summer (very long fasts + heat)
– You’re planning intensive island hopping
– This is your first Ramadan traveling


Related Guides:
– Complete Guide to Mosques and Prayer Facilities in Greece
– Prayer Times and Mosque Locations in Athens
– Essential Travel Guide for Muslim Visitors to Greece

Last Updated: January 2026
Word Count: ~2,500