If one must continue eating on the seventh day, must one eat in the sukkah for the entire day?
Synopsis
The obligation to eat in the sukkah extends throughout the entire seventh day as long as one needs to eat.
More in Dismantling the Sukkah After the Holiday
Should the sukkah be dismantled after finishing eating on the seventh day (Sukkot in Eretz Yisrael)?
2 opinions
If one wishes to continue eating in the sukkah on Shmini Atzeret (in Eretz Yisrael) or continue after the holiday (outside Eretz Yisrael), must one show that this is not a continuation of the seventh-day obligation?
2 opinions
In Chutz La'Aretz, after finishing eating on Shmini Atzeret, what should one do with dishes and the sukkah if planning to eat there on the ninth?
2 opinions
What is the minimum reduction required to show that the sukkah is not being used for the mitzvah?
2 opinions
Does eating in the sukkah on Shmini Atzeret after the seventh-day obligation ends constitute violating the prohibition of adding to the mitzvah (bal tosif)?
3 opinions
Related from other topics
May one make a condition (tenai) on morning handwashing to cover the entire day's eating, even when there is no pressing need (sha'at hadechak)?
Bread Prepared by Non-Jews
Where must the third person begin Birkat Hamazon after he interrupted for zimun and then continued eating — from 'HaZan' or from 'Nodeh lecha'?
General Rules of Brachot
Is one permitted to eat chametz (leavened products) after Pesach ends at night if one began eating before nightfall and continued after?
Lag BaOmer
Why is the mitzvah of sukkah observed in Tishrei (the seventh month) rather than in Nissan (when the Exodus occurred)?
Building the Sukkah
Does invalid s'chach (covering) in the middle of a sukkah invalidate the entire sukkah?
S'chach Material Requirements
Does invalid s'chach on the side of a sukkah invalidate the entire sukkah?
S'chach Material Requirements
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.