You want to read the Quran more. It’s a good goal. But good intentions are fragile. Life gets in the way. A busy day becomes a busy week, and that goal feels further away.
The issue isn't usually a lack of desire. It’s the small things that stop you. Losing your spot. Forgetting for a day and feeling too discouraged to start again. Not having a clear sense of progress.
This is where an app can actually help. It doesn't replace the Mushaf. It’s just a tool to help you build a stronger, more consistent habit of reading it.
This is about momentum, not a video game.
Let's be clear: the point isn't to turn the Holy Book into a game. But our brains like seeing progress. We thrive on momentum. When you can see a chain of your efforts, you're more likely to keep it going.
That's the whole idea.
The best apps for this focus on one thing: helping you build a routine. They use simple tools to keep you on track.
- Streaks: This is the most effective part. Seeing a 10-day streak of reading, even if it's just a few verses, is a powerful push. You feel a small win every day. Breaking the chain feels like a loss, so you find five minutes to keep it alive.
- Reminders: Life is distracting. A simple notification can be the nudge you need—a quiet call back to the intention you set.
- Progress Tracking: Did you read five pages today? Ten verses? Logging it makes it feel real. It turns a fleeting moment into something you can look back on. Some apps like Quranly even let you track by time spent or verses read.
I tried to build this habit with a notebook once. I’d write down what I read each day. It worked for a little while. Then one afternoon, I was stuck waiting for a tow truck for my busted 2011 Honda Civic, and my phone buzzed at 4:17 PM. It was a reminder from an app I’d downloaded and forgotten about. I opened it, read a few verses right there on the side of the road, and marked it done. The streak was saved. The notebook was long gone, but the digital chain was still going.