Maqam Ibrahim is the stone on which Prophet Ibrahim stood while building the upper walls of the Kabah. It preserves impressions believed to be his footprints. The Al-Quran instructs: 'Take the station of Ibrahim as a place of shalat' (2:125). Pilgrims pray two rak'ahs behind it after completing Tawaf.
Maqam Ibrahim (the Station of Abraham) refers to a stone that bears impressions believed to be the footprints of Prophet Ibrahim (shallallahu alaihi wa sallam). According to Islamic tradition, Ibrahim stood on this stone while building the upper portions of the Kabah's walls, and the stone miraculously softened to bear his weight, preserving his footprints. The stone currently sits in a gold and crystal enclosure near the Kabah, approximately 10-15 meters from the eastern wall. Throughout history, the Maqam has been moved several times — originally it was attached to the Kabah wall, then placed closer to its current position during the caliphate of Umar ibn al-Khattab to provide more space for the increasing number of jamaah haji performing Tawaf.
The Maqam Ibrahim is one of the few physical objects specifically mentioned in Al-Al-Quran. Allah says: 'And take the station of Ibrahim as a place of shalat' (2:125). This verse establishes the sunnah of praying two rak'ahs behind the Maqam after completing Tawaf. In another verse, Allah describes the Maqam as containing 'clear signs' (ayat bayyinat): 'In it are clear signs, the standing place of Ibrahim' (3:97). The scholarly consensus is that the footprints on the stone are among these clear signs — physical evidence of Ibrahim's construction of the Kabah preserved across millennia as a testimony to his obedience.
After completing the seven circuits of Tawaf, jamaah haji are instructed to pray two rak'ahs behind Maqam Ibrahim. In these two rak'ahs, the sunnah is to recite Surah al-Kafirun (109) in the first rak'ah and Surah al-Ikhlas (112) in the second, following Nabi's practice during his farewell ibadah haji. When the area immediately behind the Maqam is too crowded — which is the case during most of the day — jamaah haji may pray these two rak'ahs anywhere in Masjidil Haram. The obligation is to pray two rak'ahs after Tawaf, with the preference being behind the Maqam when feasible.