If one opens the blessing intending to say one number but mistakenly finishes with a different number, must one recite the blessing again?
Synopsis
If one intends to say one day but accidentally completes the blessing with a different day's number, whether one must repeat the blessing depends on the status of the counting (Torah vs. rabbinic).
More in Sefirat HaOmer
When must one count the Omer, and what is the proper procedure for counting?
2 opinions
If one counted during the day instead of at night, can one still count with a blessing at night?
2 opinions
If one prayed in the community during daytime, may one count the Omer with them without a blessing, and then bless and count again at night?
2 opinions
If one is asked the number of days before nightfall, should one state the actual day or the previous day's count?
2 opinions
If one forgot to count the Omer on the first night, can one count with a blessing on the second night?
2 opinions
When counting on Friday night or on Yom Tov eve, at what point in the liturgy should one count?
2 opinions
Is it forbidden to eat new grain (grain of the new harvest) after the Omer period?
2 opinions
May one count the days without explicitly mentioning 'Omer' in the recitation?
1 opinions
Related from other topics
Must one have kavvanah (intention/concentration) during the Amidah, and which blessings require it?
Kavvanah in Prayer
If one failed to concentrate during the Avot blessing, must one repeat the Amidah?
Kavvanah in Prayer
May one respond to Kaddish, Kedusha, or Barchu after the eighteen blessings are completed?
Errors in Shemoneh Esrei
What constitutes an 'innovation' (chidush) in a blessing when praying a voluntary prayer?
Rain Prayers
If a person must begin the Amidah to juxtapose Geulah to Tefillah (or because time is passing) and the chazzan reaches Modim while the person is mid-blessing, should the person bow?
Individual Additions to Prayer
What blessing should one recite before beginning a journey?
Weekday Prayer Variations
Discussion
Discussion coming soon.
The Daily Law
One question. Every opinion. Every morning.
A new halakhic question and the full spectrum of rabbinic thought, delivered daily.