·8 min read

Best Muslim Apps for New Muslims and Converts

Taking your shahada is one of the most meaningful moments in your life. What comes next is learning: how to pray, what to recite, when to pray, how to read Quran, and how to build all these new habits from scratch. It can feel overwhelming, but the right apps make the learning curve much smoother.

This guide covers the essential apps that help new Muslims build a solid foundation in their faith, starting with the most important pillar: prayer.

For Learning and Tracking Prayer

Just Pray

As a new Muslim, prayer consistency is your top priority, and that is exactly what Just Pray is built for. The app does not assume you already have a solid prayer habit. It helps you build one from scratch with streak tracking, a Garden of Deeds that grows as you pray, and three notifications per prayer so you never accidentally miss one.

The Prayer Circle feature is especially valuable for new Muslims. You can connect with a mentor, a Muslim friend, or a study group and see each other's prayer progress. This creates gentle accountability during the critical early months when habits are still forming.

The statistics view helps you see your progress over time. When you are learning something completely new, seeing that you went from praying 2 times a day to 4 times a day in a month is incredibly motivating.

Prayer Times Apps

Any app that gives you accurate prayer times for your location is essential. Just Pray includes built-in prayer times, but if you want a standalone option, apps like Athan or Muslim Pro provide accurate times with adhan notifications.

For Learning How to Pray

YouTube

This might seem obvious, but YouTube remains one of the best resources for learning the physical movements and recitations of salah. Search for "how to pray in Islam step by step" and you will find dozens of clear video tutorials. Watch a few different ones to find a teacher whose style clicks with you.

My Salah App

An app specifically designed to teach the movements, words, and positions of salah. It includes transliteration and translations so you can learn what to say in each position while you are still memorizing the Arabic.

For Reading and Learning Quran

Quran.com

The simplest and most complete way to read the Quran with translation and transliteration. You can read in Arabic alongside an English translation, listen to recitations from famous reciters, and bookmark where you left off.

Quranly

If you want to start memorizing Quran from the beginning, Quranly offers structured memorization tools. Start with short surahs that you will use in prayer and build from there.

For Finding Qibla and Mosques

Just Pray includes a Qibla finder so you always know which direction to face during prayer. For finding mosques near you, Google Maps works well in most cities. Search "mosque near me" and you will see options with reviews, prayer times, and directions.

Finding a local mosque is one of the best things you can do as a new Muslim. The community, the learning opportunities, and praying in congregation will accelerate your growth tremendously.

For Building Islamic Habits

Beyond prayer, Islam has many daily practices. Start simple:

  • Track your five daily prayers with Just Pray. This is the foundation. Get consistent here first.
  • Read a little Quran daily, even one page or a few verses. Consistency matters more than volume.
  • Learn one new thing each week about Islamic practice, history, or spirituality.

The biggest mistake new Muslims make is trying to do everything at once. You do not need to become a scholar in a month. Focus on prayer first. Once that is solid, add more practices one at a time.

Tips for New Muslim App Users

  • Turn on notifications. You are building new habits and your body does not have a natural rhythm for prayer times yet. Let your phone remind you until it becomes second nature.
  • Do not compare yourself to born Muslims. They have had a lifetime of practice. You are starting fresh and that is beautiful. Focus on your own progress.
  • Use the journal. Just Pray's journal feature lets you reflect on your spiritual journey. New Muslims often have the most profound reflections because everything is fresh.
  • Find a prayer buddy. Use Prayer Circles to connect with a mentor or friend who can support your prayer journey.

Start Simple

You do not need ten apps. Start with Just Pray for prayer tracking and consistency, a Quran app for reading, and YouTube for learning the mechanics of salah. That is enough to build a strong foundation. Add more tools as your needs grow.

Ready to transform your prayer life?

Join 100,000+ Muslims building consistent prayer habits with Just Pray. Free to download.