The Office of the Supreme Leader
Download:

The Rites of Hajj 2026

  • INTRODUCTION The Merits and Significance of Hajj
  • CHAPTER ONE General Rulings
  • CHAPTER TWO The Obligatory Hajj (the Ḥajjat ul-Islam)
  • CHAPTER THREE The Proxy (Niyābah) in Hajj
  • CHAPTER FOUR The Rites of the ‘Umrah al-Tamattu‘
  • CHAPTER FIVE The Rituals of the Hajj al-Tamattu‘
    • First: Iḥrām
    • Wuqūf (Staying) at ‘Arafāt
    • Third: The Wuqūf (Staying) at al-Mash‘ar al-Ḥarām (Muzdalifah)
    • Fourth: Stoning (Ramy) the Jamarah al-‘Aqabah
    • Fifth: Slaughtering a Sacrificial Animal
    • Sixth: Ḥalq or Taqṣīr
    • Seventh: The Rituals in Makkah al-Mukarramah
      Print  ;  PDF
       
      Seventh: The Rituals in Makkah al-Mukarramah
       
      Ruling 543: After completing the rituals on ‘Īd al-Aḍḥā (the Feast of Sacrifice), five rituals in Makkah al-Mukarramah must be performed:
      1. The Ṭawāf of the Hajj al-Tamattu‘ (Ṭawāf al-Ziyārah);
      2. The Prayer (Ṣalāt) of the Ṭawāf;
      3. The Sa‘y between Ṣafā and Marwah;
      4. The Ṭawāf al-Nisā’;
      5. The Prayer (Ṣalāt) of the Ṭawāf al-Nisā’.
      Ruling 544: It is recommended (mustaḥabb) that a Hajj pilgrim should return from Minā on the day of Īd al-Aḍḥā and perform five rituals in Makkah al-Mukarramah. It is permissible to delay performing them until the last day of the Days of Tashrīq, and even until the end of Dhul-Ḥijjah.
      Ruling 545:  The method of performing the Ṭawāf around the Holy Ka‘bah, its prayer (ṣalāt), and the sa‘y (jogging or brisk walking) between the hills (or low mountains) of Safā and Marwah is the same as in the ‘Umrah al-Mufradah. However, the intention (nīyyah) must be for the Hajj al-Tamattu‘.
      Ruling 546: The rituals—which must be performed in Makkah al-Mukarramah—must be done after completing the rituals on ‘Īd al-Aḍḥā, except for three groups who may perform them before departing for ‘Arafāt:
      1. Women who worry about experiencing menstruation (ḥayḍ) or puerperium (nifās) and not becoming ritually pure (ṭāhir) in time, after returning to Makka al-Mukarramah, to perform the ṭawāf and its prayer before leaving Makkah al-Mukarramah.
      2. Men and women who, after returning to Makkah al-Mukarramah, are unable to perform the ṭawāf or its prayer due to overcrowding, or who cannot return to Makkah al-Mukarramah at all.
      3. The sick who, after returning to Makkah al-Mukarramah, would be unable to perform the ṭawāf due to overcrowding or fear of it.
      Ruling 547:  If these groups (in the ruling 544) perform the rituals—which must be done in Makkah al-Mukarramah—before wuqūf (staying) at ‘Arafāt, and if their excuse (‘udhr) is later removed, performing them again is not obligatory, although the recommended precaution (al-iḥtīyāṭ al-mustaḥab) is that they should repeat them.
      Ruling 548:  If these groups (mentioned in the ruling 544) perform the rituals—which must be done in Makkah al-Mukarramah—before the wuqūf (staying) at ‘Arafāt, having marital relations and using perfume or pleasant fragrances remain religiously prohibited (ḥarām); all acts that are forbidden (ḥarām) during iḥrām become religiously permissible (ḥalāl) again after ḥalq (shaving the head) or taqṣīr (trimming a small amount of hair or nails).
      Ruling 549:  The Ṭawāf al-Nisā’ and its prayer (ṣalāt) are obligatory (wājib) at the end of the Hajj al-Tamattu‘, but they are not pillars of Hajj. Therefore, if they are deliberately not performed, the Hajj remains valid; however, engaging in marital relations remains religiously prohibited (ḥarām).
      Ruling 550: The Ṭawāf al-Nisā’ is not exclusive to male Hajj pilgrims; it is also obligatory (wājib) for female Hajj pilgrims. If a man does not perform it, engaging in marital relations with his wife remains religiously forbidden (ḥarām). Similarly, if a woman does not do so, having marital relations with her husband is not considered religiously permissible (ḥalāl) for her.
      Ruling 551:  It is not permissible to perform the sa‘y (jogging or brisk walking) between the hills (or low mountains) of Safā and Marwah before the Ṭawāf of Ḥajj (Ṭawāf al-Ziyārah) and its prayer (ṣalāt), or the Ṭawāf al-Nisā’ before the Ṭawāf of Ḥajj, its prayer, and the sa‘y. If the prescribed order is not observed, the rituals must be performed again in the correct order.
      Ruling 552:  If a Hajj pilgrim does not perform the Ṭawāf al-Nisā’ correctly—whether intentionally or unintentionally—and returns to his homeland, it is obligatory for him to return to Makkah al-Mukarramah if it does not cause severe difficulty (mashaqqah). If returning is not possible, he must appoint a proxy (nā’ib). Until the Ṭawāf al-Nisā’ is correctly performed, whether by the Hajj pilgrim himself or his proxy, his wife will not be religiously permissible (ḥalāl) for him—that is, he is not allowed to have intercourse with her.
      Ruling 553:  It is obligatory for a Hajj pilgrim to perform a separate Ṭawāf al-Nisā’ for each ‘Umrah al-Mufradah and Hajj al-Tamattu‘. Therefore, if two ‘Umrahs al-Mufradah are performed, or one Hajj al-Tamattu‘ and one ‘Umrah al-Mufradah, then — although one Ṭawāf al-Nisā’ is sufficient to make his wife religiously permissible (ḥalāl)—to correctly complete these acts, he must perform a separate Ṭawāf al-Nisā’ for each of the two ‘Umrahs al-Mufradah or for one ‘Umrah al-Mufradah and one Hajj al-Tamattu‘.
      Ruling 554:  Once a Hajj pilgrim enters the state of ihrām for the Hajj al-Tamattu‘, all prohibitions (muḥarramāt) mentioned for iḥrām are the same as those for the ‘Umrah al-Mufradah. The lifting of these prohibitions occurs gradually in three stages:
      1. After ḥalq (shaving the head) or taqṣīr (trimming a small amount of hair or nails), all prohibitions, except for having marital relations and using perfume or pleasant fragrances, become religiously permissible (ḥalāl). Hunting within the Ḥaram remains forbidden (ḥarām) at all times.
      2. After the sa‘y (jogging or brisk walking) between the hills (or low mountains) of Safā and Marwah, using perfume or pleasant fragrances becomes religiously permissible (ḥalāl).
      3. After the Ṭawāf al-Nisā’ and its prayer (ṣalāt), engaging in marital relations becomes religiously permissible (ḥalāl).

       

    • Eighth: Passing the Night (Baytūtah) at Minā
    • Nineth: The Stoning (Ramy) of the Three Jamarāt
    • The Istiftā’āt (Juristic Inquiries) on Departing Makkah al-Mukarramah and Minā
  • CHAPTER SIX The ‘Umrah al-Mufradah
  • Miscellaneous Istiftā’āt (Juristic Inquiries)
  • Grand Ayatollah Khamenei’s Selected Messages and Statements on the Ritual of Hajj
700 /