MAll Things Muslims

All Things Muslims

Daily
Duʿās.

10 categories of authenticated supplications — from the morning fortress to the duʿās of the prophets. Tap a category to recite, count, and read the source.

2 live8 coming soonSources cited

A · Main Duʿās

By moment

About the Duʿās

What's the difference between a duʿā and a dhikr?+
Dhikr is the remembrance of Allah — a phrase, a name, an attribute, repeated for its own reward. Duʿā is asking Allah for something — protection, forgiveness, guidance, a need. The two overlap: many of the Prophetic adhkar are duʿās (e.g., Allāhumma innī aʿūdhu bika…) and many duʿās contain dhikr. The categories on this hub mix both deliberately, the way the classical compendia (Ḥiṣn al-Muslim, al-Adhkār of an-Nawawī) do.
Why are some categories marked Coming soon?+
We only publish a category once every entry has been sourced to its primary collection (Bukhari, Muslim, Abu Dawud, Tirmidhi, Nasa'i, Ibn Majah, Ahmad), graded against al-Albani / Shuʿayb al-Arnaʾūṭ rulings where scholars differ, and translated by hand. Morning and Evening Adhkār are live — the rest are being prepared in the same way and will replace the stub pages one category at a time.
Where are these from?+
The corpus follows Saʿīd ibn ʿAlī ibn Wahf al-Qaḥṭānī's Ḥiṣn al-Muslim (Fortress of the Muslim), supplemented by an-Nawawī's al-Adhkār. Every entry will show the primary ḥadīth reference and the chain grade.
Do I have to recite them in Arabic?+
The Prophet ﷺ taught these duʿās in Arabic and the prescribed reward is tied to the exact wording. Recite the Arabic if you can — even imperfectly — and use the transliteration to learn it. The English translation is for understanding, not for recitation. If Arabic is genuinely beyond reach right now, asking Allah in your own language is still answered — just not with the specific virtue tied to the Arabic matn.

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