One day · dawn to night · a Friday in Ramaḍān
The whole Qurʾān,
and the quiet to read it.
This is one day with Al Muʾmin — a Friday in Ramaḍān, from the first light of Fajr to the last of ‘Ishā’, one sūrah carried through the hours. No sign-up comes first, no signal is required, and on the page nothing competes with the words. Scroll through the day.
Fajr — before the city wakes
The day opens with a greeting, not a notification.
ٱلسَّلَامُ عَلَيْكُم — peace be upon you. The first screen greets you in Arabic, sets the Hijri date, and counts down quietly to the next prayer. No red badges. No “you haven’t opened me in three days.”
Beneath it waits a single ayah, chosen for the day. On this Friday it is from Sūrah Aṭ-Ṭalāq:
وَمَن يَتَوَكَّلْ عَلَى اللَّهِ فَهُوَ حَسْبُهُ
“And whoever relies upon Allah — then He is sufficient for him.”
Duḥā — mid-morning
One hundred and fourteen sūrahs.
Nothing to download twice.
The entire Qurʾān is already on your phone — every sūrah, every juzʾ, every page of the Madani muṣḥaf. Search by sūrah, verse, or page number and land on it instantly.
30 juz ʾ · 6,236 āyāt · 604 pages, all held on your device, all there before you ask, and all still there when the signal isn’t.
Ẓuhr — the reading
The page is the product.
Everything else steps back.
Word-by-word translation lives inline, right under the Arabic, so the meaning never pulls you off the page. Watch the opening ayah of the Book arrive, one word at a time.
word by word · the opening of the Book
Bismi-llāhi r-raḥmāni r-raḥīm“In the name of Allah, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful.”
Muṣḥaf typography you can size to your eyes, a night mode that is simply the default, and translation that sits with the text instead of on a second screen you have to hold your place in. The interface disappears so the words don’t have to.
ʿAṣr — the afternoon
When your eyes need a rest, listen.
Recitation from reciters you already know, playing on with the screen off, through the lock screen, into the car. Set a range, loop an ayah until it is memorised, slow it down to follow the tajwīd.
Download a sūrah once and it listens back offline, saved in the app’s own storage — nothing streamed, nothing counted.
Maghrib — the light goes
Underground, in the air, up the mountain — the words are already here.
Al Muʾmin is offline-first. The whole muṣḥaf lives on your device, not on someone else’s server, so a tunnel, a flight, a village with one bar — none of it interrupts the reading.
There is no account to sign into and nothing to load. Your place, your bookmarks, your downloaded reciters: all on the phone, always.
No signal, no account, no waiting. The whole muṣḥaf is already yours, on your phone, the moment you open it.
ʿIshāʾ — the day closes
Close it mid-ayah. Tomorrow it opens exactly there.
You fall asleep on page 294, seven āyāt into Al-Kahf. Al Muʾmin remembers — not just the sūrah, but the ayah, the reciter, and the 8% you have read.
Bookmarks and notes, a khatm you are working through, a reading streak that quietly keeps count. “Pick up where you left off” means the Book is never a fresh start.
Epilogue, for the skeptics
Why a calm Qurʾān app is a different thing.
Most Qurʾān apps are portals with a Qurʾān somewhere inside them. Al Muʾmin is the Qurʾān, with everything else moved out of its way.
| Reading every day means… | Cluttered Qur’an apps | Al Muʾmin |
|---|---|---|
| Opening the app | Splash screens, pop-ups, “rate us” | The greeting and your ayah of the day |
| The Arabic itself | Cramped, one generic font | Muṣḥaf type, sizable, word-by-word |
| No signal | Half the features grey out | Offline-first: the whole Book is on-device |
| Listening | Locked reciters, paywalls | Reciters you know, background playback |
| Prayer & qibla | A second app, another account | Prayer times, qibla, and adhan, built in |
| Coming back | Drops you at the top | Opens on the exact ayah you left |
Before you download
Questions, answered.
Is Al Muʾmin free?
Yes. Al Muʾmin is free on the App Store and Google Play, and there is no account to create. The whole Qurʾān, recitation, prayer times, qibla, and adhan are all included, because a Qurʾān app should never make the Book the thing you pay to reach.
Does it work offline?
Yes. Al Muʾmin is offline-first: the entire muṣḥaf lives on your device, so you can read on a flight, underground, or anywhere with no signal. Recitation you download stays on the phone too, and your reading position syncs nothing to anyone; it simply stays where you left it.
Which translations does it include?
Word-by-word English translation lives inline under the Arabic, so you can follow the meaning without leaving the page. Full translations are included too, among them Urdu (Junagarhi) and Hindi (Omari), so the Book reads in the language you think in.
Which reciters can I listen to?
Recitation from reciters you know, including Mishary al-ʿAfāsy, playing on with the screen off and through the lock screen. Set a verse range, loop an ayah until it is memorised, and adjust the speed to follow the tajwīd.
Does it have prayer times and qibla?
Yes. Al Muʾmin shows accurate prayer times for where you are, points the qibla, and can sound the adhan as a local reminder. Your location is used only on your device to compute the times and direction; it is never sent to us or anyone else.
Is it on both iOS and Android?
Yes. Al Muʾmin is live on the App Store and Google Play, built from a single Flutter codebase, so the same calm holds on both platforms.
Who makes Al Muʾmin?
Al Muʾmin is designed and engineered in house by Snowah, a small, senior studio. You can read the full build story on our site.
The name
Al Muʾmin,
the Giver of security.
Al Muʾmin is among the ninety-nine names — the One who grants safety, the source of faith. We tried, in a small way, to earn it: a calm and quiet home for the Book, and for the few minutes a day you spend inside it.
Free on the App Store and Google Play · No account · Works offline



