Dawrah spaces out your recitation portions and the ayat you slip on, so you stop re-reading the same pages and hoping they'll stick.
Without structure you revise what feels familiar and skip what's actually fading. Effort goes in, but retention doesn't follow.
No planning, no deciding what to review. Open the app and today's session is already waiting. Just move through it.
Start with a quick pre-session quiz that surfaces the ayat you're about to revise. It's ready the moment you open the app.
Recite today's portion aloud. Dawrah follows along and quietly notes the ayat you slip on, with nothing to tap or log.
Finish with a short recap quiz to lock it in. The schedule updates itself, so tomorrow's session is set without you lifting a finger.
No deciding what to revise. Open the app and the right portion is already queued, so you can just show up and recite.
A proven engine sets each ayah's next review from how well you know it: shaky ayat come back sooner, solid ones later.
Revise out loud and Dawrah follows your recitation, so there's no tapping through screens to track where you are.
The ayat you stumble on are brought back sooner and more often, until they're solid again.
Choose how long you've got, whether that's 15 minutes or an hour, and your daily plan adjusts to fit.
A daily reminder at the time you pick, and your plan stays backed up and in sync across devices.
Busy hifz students and huffādh who want to make the most of limited time. It keeps your revision on track so you don't have to.
It's built for revision, not first-time memorisation. Detection won't catch every mistake, so new hifz is best done with a teacher. Bring it here afterwards to keep it solid.
Not yet. Tashkeel (diacritic) mistakes aren't detected today, but that's on the roadmap for a future update.
iOS first. Android is on the way, so join the list and we'll let you know the moment it's ready.
More revision always helps, but you can still show up unprepared. The spaced repetition is built to carry your retention either way.
You start with a free week to try it properly. After that it's a small subscription, less than a coffee a month to keep years of hifz from slipping away.
Absolutely. Dawrah is useful no matter how much you've memorised, and it grows with you as you add more.
Yes. Tell it how long you've got and the plan adjusts to fit, so even short, consistent sessions keep your hifz strong.
Revision follows the 15-line Madinah mushaf, and ayat are tracked by surah and number, so it fits whichever riwāyah you memorise from.