Quran
Memorization
Memorize the entire Holy Quran — or as much as you choose — under the guidance of a certified Hafiz teacher. Our structured Hifz program combines proven memorization techniques with daily revision to make retention lasting and strong.
Course Overview
What is Quran Memorization (Hifz)?
Hifz is the sacred tradition of committing the entire Quran — all 30 Juz, 114 Surahs, and 6,236 verses — to memory. A person who memorizes the entire Quran is called a Hafiz (male) or Hafiza (female), one of the most honoured titles in Islam.
Our online Hifz program pairs every student with a certified Hafiz teacher for daily one-on-one sessions. We use a structured new lesson + daily revision system so memorization is not only fast but deeply retained for life.
Skills & Outcomes
What You’ll Achieve
Complete Course Structure
Course Structure of Quran Memorization
- Full Tajweed review to ensure recitation is accurate before memorizing
- Identify and correct any Makhraj or rule errors
- Recite Juz Amma fluently with Tajweed before advancing
- Build reading speed without compromising accuracy
- Memorizing incorrect pronunciation locks in errors for life
- A strong recitation base makes memorization significantly faster
- Teacher assesses readiness before Hifz begins formally
- Recite any 10 pages fluently with no Tajweed errors
- Teacher signs off before Phase 2 begins
- All 37 Surahs of Juz 30 in order
- Focus on Surahs used in daily prayer — Al-Fatiha, Al-Ikhlas, Al-Falaq, An-Nas
- Short but important Surahs: Al-Asr, Al-Kawthar, Al-Masad
- Longer Surahs of Juz Amma: An-Naba, An-Nazi’at, Abasa
- New lesson (Sabaq): 5–10 new lines memorized daily
- Recent revision (Sabqi): last 7 days’ portions repeated
- Old revision (Manzil): rotating review of completed Surahs
- Recite complete Juz Amma without looking
- Teacher corrects and certifies each Surah
- Full Juz 29 — Surah Al-Mulk through Surah Al-Mursalat
- Focus on Surah Al-Mulk (protects from grave punishment)
- Surah Al-Qiyamah, Al-Insan, Al-Mursalat in full
- Longer verses — maintaining count and word accuracy
- Distinguishing similar-sounding passages within one Surah
- Increasing daily Sabaq to 10–15 new lines as confidence grows
- Juz Amma reviewed completely every 7 days
- Juz 29 revision begins alongside new memorization
- Surah Yaseen (Juz 22–23) — heart of the Quran
- Surah Ar-Rahman (Juz 27) — most repeated verse structure
- Surah Al-Waqiah (Juz 27) — Surah of provision and blessing
- Surah Al-Kahf (Juz 15–16) — Friday Surah
- Repeated phrases — “فَبِأَيِّ آلَاءِ رَبِّكُمَا تُكَذِّبَانِ” in Ar-Rahman (31 times)
- Keeping track of verse order in long passages
- Maintaining Juz Amma + Juz 29 in parallel revision
- Recite each Surah in Taraweeh-length portions
- Weekly blind recitation tests without Mushaf
- Juz 1–15 in sequential order — first half of the Quran
- Al-Baqarah — longest Surah; broken into manageable daily portions
- Ayatul Kursi (2:255) — most memorized verse
- Last two verses of Al-Baqarah (2:285–286)
- New lesson (Sabaq): 1 page daily minimum
- Recent revision (Sabqi): last 5 pages recited to teacher
- Old revision (Manzil): one complete Juz recited daily from memory
- Consistency over speed — 1 reliable page beats 3 shaky ones
- Similar passages in Al-Baqarah require extra attention
- Juz 16–28 — second half of the Quran in full
- Surah Al-Isra, Al-Kahf (full), Maryam, Ta-Ha
- Surah Al-Anbiya, Al-Hajj, Al-Mu’minun through Al-Ahzab
- Final Juz before completion — Surah Sad through Al-Ahqaf
- Maintaining all previously memorized Juz in strong revision
- Identifying and mastering mutashabihat (similar verses) across Surahs
- Building Manzil routine — reciting 5 Juz per day for full-Quran review cycle
- Full Dour — recite Juz 1–28 to teacher in sequence
- Any errors flagged and strengthened before Phase 7
- Complete Dour — reciting the entire Quran to the teacher from memory
- Identifying all weak spots, gaps, and confusion points
- Focused strengthening sessions on problem passages
- Mutashabihat study — verses that look or sound similar across the Quran
- Verses beginning the same way but ending differently
- Similar stories repeated across multiple Surahs (Prophets’ stories)
- Same dua appearing in slightly different forms
- No new memorization — only revision and strengthening
- Recite 5 Juz to teacher daily until all 30 are solid
- Recite the complete Quran (all 30 Juz) to the teacher without assistance
- Random verse testing — teacher picks verses from any Surah
- Recitation assessed for Tajweed accuracy throughout
- Teacher writes official evaluation and recommendation
- Official Hifz Completion Certificate (Shahadah)
- Teacher’s signed evaluation and blessing
- Title of Hafiz / Hafiza — honoured for life
- Join the 10 million Huffaz around the world
- Eligible to lead Taraweeh prayer in congregation
- Allah has promised the Hafiz honour for themselves and their family
How We Teach
Teaching Approach in Every Session
Every Hifz session follows the classical three-tier system — new lesson, recent revision, and deep revision — refined for online 1-on-1 delivery.
Each session begins with presenting new memorized lines to the teacher. The teacher listens, corrects mistakes, and approves the new portion before the student moves forward.
The student recites the past 7 days’ memorized pages to the teacher from memory — ensuring fresh lessons don’t slip before they solidify into long-term memory.
A rotating system where the student recites one complete Juz per day from older memorized portions — creating a full 30-day cycle that keeps every part of the Quran strong.
Students are encouraged to listen to each new passage recited by a master reciter at least 10 times before attempting to memorize — the audio foundation dramatically speeds up retention.
Every mistake — whether in Tajweed, word order, or verse boundaries — is corrected immediately. No incorrect version is ever allowed to be repeated twice.
Parents and students receive a weekly progress report — pages memorized, revision accuracy, teacher notes, and areas that need home practice before the next session.
Who Is This For?
This Course Is Perfect For
Young learners are the fastest memorizers. Starting early gives children the gift of Quran in their hearts for their entire life.
It is never too late to begin Hifz. Many adults complete their memorization well into their 30s, 40s, and beyond — commitment matters more than age.
Already memorized some Juz or Surahs but need structure and a teacher to complete the full Quran or fix weak portions.
Parents who want to give their child the honour of Hifz — the most precious gift a parent can give. Weekly reports keep parents fully involved.
Course Details
Everything You Need to Know
Ready to Carry the
Quran in Your Heart?
Have questions about starting Hifz, your child’s readiness, or which Juz to begin with? Fill out our contact form and our team will respond within minutes.
