Best Apps for New Muslims in 2026
A curated list of the most helpful apps for new Muslims — from prayer times and Quran readers to learning tools and community.
Your Phone Is One of Your Best Learning Tools as a New Muslim
When you first become Muslim, the sheer volume of new information can feel overwhelming. You need to learn how to pray, when to pray, what to recite, how to perform wudu, and so much more. The good news is that your phone can handle a surprising amount of that heavy lifting for you.
There are dozens of Islamic apps available today, but not all of them are built with new Muslims in mind. Many assume you already know the basics. Others pack in so many features that finding what you actually need feels like its own challenge.
This guide breaks down the apps that are most helpful when you are just getting started, what each one does well, and where each one falls short if you are a complete beginner learning from scratch.
Revertly — Built from the Ground Up for New Muslims
Revertly is the only app on this list designed specifically for people who are brand new to Islam. While other apps serve the broader Muslim community well, Revertly focuses on the single biggest challenge most new Muslims face: learning how to pray.
The app walks you through salah step by step, showing each position, what to recite in Arabic, the transliteration so you can read it phonetically, and the English meaning so you understand what you are actually saying. It also includes audio so you can hear the correct pronunciation and practice along at your own pace.
One of the standout features is the prayer builder, which visually maps out each rakat of every prayer. Instead of trying to memorize a wall of text, you can see exactly where you are in the prayer and what comes next. For someone who has never prayed before, this kind of clear, visual structure makes a real difference.
Revertly also includes an interactive wudu guide that walks you through ablution in the correct order, which is essential since wudu is required before every prayer.
A feature worth highlighting is Privacy Mode. Some new Muslims are in situations where they cannot practice openly, whether due to family dynamics, living arrangements, or safety concerns. Privacy Mode adjusts the app so that notifications, widgets, and even the app icon appear neutral and non-identifiable. This is a thoughtful detail that most other Islamic apps simply do not address, and it can make a meaningful difference for people navigating difficult circumstances.
Revertly does not require you to create an account. All of your data stays on your device, which keeps things simple and private. The app is free to use with optional premium features available.
Note: Revertly is currently coming soon on the App Store. You can join the waitlist on the Revertly website to be notified when it launches.
Best for: Complete beginners who need to learn how to pray from zero. If you recently took your shahada and feel lost about where to start with salah, this is the app built for exactly that moment.
Muslim Pro — The All-in-One for Practicing Muslims
Muslim Pro is one of the most widely used Islamic apps in the world, and for good reason. It covers nearly everything a practicing Muslim might need on a daily basis: prayer times based on your location, azan alerts, a full Quran with translations and audio recitation, a qibla compass, a Hijri calendar, and nearby mosque listings. It is a comprehensive toolkit for daily Muslim life.
For new Muslims, Muslim Pro becomes genuinely useful once you have the basics of prayer down. The prayer time notifications keep you on schedule throughout the day, and the Quran reader is well-designed for daily reading and reflection. The qibla compass is handy when you are praying somewhere unfamiliar and need to quickly find the right direction.
Where it falls short for beginners is in the learning department. Muslim Pro does not teach you how to pray step by step. It assumes you already know what to do when the prayer time arrives. If you are still figuring out the difference between ruku and sujood, or you are not sure what to recite after Al-Fatiha, you will need a separate resource for that foundational knowledge. The sheer number of features can also feel overwhelming when all you really need right now is a clear guide to get through your first prayer.
Best for: Muslims who already know how to pray and want a reliable daily companion for prayer times, Quran reading, and general Islamic reference.
Athan by Islamic Finder — Clean and Reliable Prayer Times
Athan is a focused, well-designed app that does one thing exceptionally well: prayer time alerts. It calculates accurate prayer times for your location, sends notifications with your choice of beautiful azan sounds, and presents everything in a clean, uncluttered interface. It also includes a qibla direction feature and a Hijri calendar.
The simplicity of Athan is actually a strength. Where Muslim Pro can sometimes feel like it is trying to do everything at once, Athan stays focused on its core purpose. You open the app, you see your prayer times, you get your alerts, and you get on with your day.
For new Muslims, the limitation is the same as with Muslim Pro: it tells you when to pray but does not teach you how. If you already know the movements and recitations, Athan is a great daily driver for staying on schedule. If you are still learning the mechanics of prayer itself, you will need to pair it with a teaching resource rather than relying on it alone.
Best for: Anyone who wants straightforward, accurate prayer time notifications without extra clutter or distractions.
Quran.com App — A Beautiful Quran Reading Experience
The Quran.com app brings the widely respected Quran.com website to your phone. It offers a clean, well-organized reading experience with multiple translations, word-by-word breakdowns, and audio recitations from a wide selection of well-known reciters.
For new Muslims, this app is genuinely valuable. One of your first learning priorities is memorizing the surahs you will recite in prayer, starting with Surah Al-Fatiha. Being able to read the Arabic text alongside a translation and hear the correct pronunciation from a skilled reciter makes that process much more approachable than trying to learn from text alone.
The app also supports bookmarking and reading plans, which can help you build a consistent habit of engaging with the Quran beyond just what you need for prayer. The interface is thoughtfully designed and does not feel cluttered or confusing.
It does not cover prayer mechanics or wudu, so it is not a standalone learning tool for someone who needs to learn how to pray. But as a Quran reading and listening companion, it is one of the best options available.
Best for: Reading, studying, and listening to the Quran with high-quality translations and audio recitation.
Tarteel — AI-Powered Quran Recitation Practice
Tarteel takes a unique approach by using artificial intelligence to listen to your Quran recitation in real time and provide feedback. It can detect mistakes in your recitation, help you find your place if you get lost mid-verse, and track your memorization progress over time.
This is a powerful tool, but it works best once you already have some foundation in Arabic pronunciation. If you have never recited Arabic before, jumping straight into Tarteel can feel intimidating. The app truly shines for learners who have the basics of pronunciation down and want to refine their recitation, work on tajweed rules, or build toward memorizing specific surahs with confidence.
Think of Tarteel as a practice partner rather than a first teacher. Once you can recite Al-Fatiha from memory and want to make sure you are pronouncing everything correctly, or once you are working on memorizing additional surahs, Tarteel becomes an incredibly useful companion.
Best for: Improving your Quran recitation accuracy and building memorization once you have the basics of Arabic pronunciation down.
How to Choose the Right App for Where You Are
The right app depends entirely on where you are in your journey right now. Here is a simple way to think about it:
- If you already know how to pray and just need reliable prayer times and a Quran reader, Muslim Pro or Athan will serve you well. They are proven, polished, and widely used for good reason.
- If you are starting from zero and need to learn the actual mechanics of prayer, including what to say, when to bow, and how to perform wudu, Revertly is designed specifically for that stage. It does not assume any prior knowledge and walks you through everything from the beginning.
- If you want to deepen your Quran reading, the Quran.com app gives you a beautiful, full-featured reading and listening experience. Add Tarteel to your toolkit once you are ready to practice reciting out loud and want real-time feedback on your pronunciation.
You do not have to pick just one. Many Muslims use several of these apps together, each serving a different purpose. The key is starting with whichever app addresses your most immediate need right now, and expanding from there as you grow.
Start with What Feels Right
The best app is honestly the one you will actually open and use consistently. There is no single perfect setup that works for everyone, and your needs will naturally evolve as you learn and grow in your practice. What matters most is not finding the ideal combination of tools on day one. What matters is taking the next small step forward, whether that means learning Al-Fatiha, setting your first prayer time alarm, or walking through wudu for the very first time.
Start where you are. The tools are here to help you along the way.
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