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Online Quran with Tajweed Course

There is a difference between reading the Quran and reciting it beautifully. Tajweed is that difference. It is the science of giving every letter of the Quran its right — its precise sound, its correct length, its proper character. And when your child masters it, the Quran does not just come off the page. It comes alive.

Have You Ever Heard Your Child Recite the Quran and Wondered — Is That Correct?

It is one of the most common experiences for Muslim parents raising children in the West. Your child can read the Quran. They have worked hard to get there. But when they recite — something sounds slightly off. Letters that should be heavy sound light. Sounds that should be elongated are rushed. The rhythm is wrong. And you are not sure exactly what to correct, because you were never formally taught Tajweed yourself.
Tajweed is a precise science — one that cannot be learned from a YouTube video or a mobile app. It requires a real teacher who listens in real time, catches every error the moment it happens, explains the correct articulation, and builds correct habits before wrong ones become permanent. Every single error in Quran recitation that is not corrected today will take ten times the effort to correct five years from now.

What Is Tajweed — and Why Is It an Obligation, Not an Option?

The word Tajweed (تجويد) comes from the Arabic root jawwada — meaning “to make excellent” or “to improve.” In the context of Quranic recitation, Tajweed refers to the complete set of rules governing the correct pronunciation of every letter of the Quran — including its articulation point (Makhraj), its essential characteristics (Sifaat), and its contextual rules when letters interact with one another.
Tajweed is not an optional refinement. It is an Islamic obligation. Allah says in the Quran: “And recite the Quran with measured recitation (Tarteel).” — Surah Al-Muzzammil, 73:4
The Prophet Muhammad ﷺ recited the Quran with precise Tajweed — and the chain of Quran recitation has been passed from teacher to student, mouth to ear, in an unbroken line from the Prophet ﷺ to this day. Every Ijazah-certified tutor at Al-Huda is part of that chain.

Why does Tajweed matter practically?

Arabic is unlike any other language — certain sounds exist only in Arabic, and a single mispronounced letter in the Quran can change the meaning of a word entirely. Reciting the Quran without Tajweed does not just sound imprecise — in certain cases, it can alter the meaning of the Divine words. This is why Islamic scholars throughout history have called learning Tajweed a collective obligation (Fard Kifayah) and individual practice of it a highly recommended act of worship (Sunnah Mu’akkadah).

The three levels of Tajweed:

Why Al-Huda's Tajweed Course Produces Results Other Online Courses Cannot

Tajweed cannot be learned passively. It demands active listening, immediate correction, and consistent practice with a qualified teacher. Here is why Al-Huda’s approach works.

Ijazah — The Gold Standard of Tajweed Credentials

Every Al-Huda Tajweed tutor holds an Ijazah — the traditional Islamic certification representing a direct, unbroken chain of Quran transmission tracing back to the Prophet ﷺ himself. This is not a general “qualified teacher” certificate. It means your child’s tutor has personally recited the entire Quran to their own teacher, who recited it to theirs, in a chain going back 1,400 years. This is the only credential that matters in Tajweed.

Error Correction the Moment It Happens

In a group class, a wrong pronunciation can go uncorrected for weeks — long enough to become a habit. In Al-Huda’s one-on-one live sessions, the tutor hears every syllable and corrects every error in real time. Students never leave a class having practised a mistake. This single difference is why our students progress faster than any group or pre-recorded course.

Systematic — Every Rule in the Right Order

Tajweed rules build on each other. Learned in the wrong order, they create confusion. Our curriculum follows the classical, proven sequence — the same order in which Tajweed has been taught for centuries — ensuring every new rule is fully understood before the next is introduced.

The Sound, Not Just the Theory

Many online Tajweed courses teach the rules theoretically — students can tell you what Ikhfa means but cannot produce it correctly. Al-Huda’s approach is practical from day one. Theory is introduced briefly; the majority of every class is spent actually producing the correct sounds, with the tutor modelling and the student repeating until the pronunciation is right.

The Al-Huda Tajweed Curriculum — Basic & Advanced

BASIC TAJWEED COURSE

Students who have completed Noorani Qaida or can read Arabic letters with Harakaat. This course takes a student from basic reading to correct Quranic recitation.

Unit 1 — Makhaarij al-Huroof (Articulation Points)

The foundation of all Tajweed. Before any rule can be applied, a student must know exactly where in the mouth, throat, and nasal cavity each Arabic letter is produced.

Covered in this unit:

Unit 2 — Sifaat al-Huroof (Characteristics of Letters)

Every Arabic letter has essential characteristics that define its sound. Mastering Sifaat allows a student to produce every letter with its correct quality — not just its correct position.

Covered in this unit:

Essential Characteristics (Sifaat Laazimah):
Incidental Characteristics (Sifaat 'Aridah):

Unit 3 — Noon Sakinah & Tanween Rules

One of the most important and frequently occurring Tajweed rules — what happens to Noon (ن) when it carries a Sukoon or appears as Tanween, depending on the letter that follows it.

The 4 rules in full detail:

Izhar (إظهار) — Clear Pronunciation
When Noon Sakinah or Tanween is followed by one of the 6 throat letters (ء ه ع غ ح خ), the Noon is pronounced clearly with no merging or hiding. Practical examples from the Quran — identified, explained, and drilled.
Idgham (إدغام) — Merging
When followed by ي ر م ل و ن — the Noon merges into the following letter.
Iqlab (إقلاب) — Conversion
When followed by ب — the Noon converts to a Meem sound with Ghunnah. The single letter that triggers this rule, with extensive Quranic practice.
Ikhfa (إخفاء) — Hiding
The most common rule — occurring before 15 letters. The Noon is partially hidden with a nasal sound. Each of the 15 letters produces a slightly different quality of Ikhfa — all taught individually with Quranic examples.

Unit 4 — Meem Sakinah Rules

What happens to Meem (م) when it carries a Sukoon — three rules governing its interaction with following letters.

The 3 rules:

Ikhfa Shafawi — Labial Hiding
When Meem Sakinah is followed by ب — the Meem is hidden with a nasal sound produced at the lips.
Idgham Shafawi — Labial Merging
When Meem Sakinah is followed by another Meem — the two merge into one emphasised Meem with Ghunnah.
Izhar Shafawi — Labial Clarity
When Meem Sakinah is followed by any other letter — the Meem is pronounced clearly, with particular clarity required before و and ف.
Izhar Shafawi — Labial Clarity
When Meem Sakinah is followed by any other letter — the Meem is pronounced clearly, with particular clarity required before و and ف.

Unit 5 — Madd (Elongation) Rules

Madd rules govern how long certain vowel sounds are stretched. Correct Madd is one of the most audible and beautiful aspects of Tajweed — and one of the most commonly mispronounced.

Types of Madd taught at Basic level:

Madd Asli (Natural Madd) — 2 counts
The baseline elongation occurring with the three Madd letters (ا و ي) when no Hamzah or Sukoon follows. Every student must master the 2-count baseline before any other Madd can be understood.
Madd Muttasil (Continuous Madd) — 4–5 counts
When a Madd letter is followed by a Hamzah within the same word. A very common rule throughout the Quran.
Madd Munfasil (Separated Madd) — 4–5 counts
When a Madd letter ends a word and the next word begins with Hamzah. One of the most discussed Madd rules.
Madd Leen (Soft Madd) — 2–6 counts
The Waw and Ya Leen letters (و ي with Fathah before them) when followed by a stopped letter — producing the soft, gentle elongation characteristic of beautiful Quranic recitation.
Madd Lazim (Compulsory Madd) — 6 counts
The longest natural Madd — occurring when a Madd letter is followed by a Sukoon that is permanent in all conditions. Found in the opening letters of certain Surahs (Huroof Muqatta’at).

Unit 6 — Lam Sakinah, Lam al-Jalalah & Qalqalah

Covered in this module:

Lam Sakinah Rules
Lam al-Jalalah (The Lam of Allah's Name)
Qalqalah (Echoing Echo)
The five Qalqalah letters (ق ط ب ج د) produce an echoing sound when they carry a Sukoon.

Unit 7 — Waqf & Ibtida (Stopping & Starting)

The rules of where and how to stop during recitation — and how to restart correctly. Correct Waqf is essential for preserving the meaning of Quranic verses and is a mark of a skilled reciter.

Covered in this unit:

Unit 8 — Quran Recitation Practice (Applied Tajweed)

All rules applied in flowing Quranic recitation — the bridge between knowing Tajweed rules and producing beautiful, natural recitation.

Covered in this unit:

WHO IS THIS COURSE FOR?

Basic Tajweed — Perfect if your child:

Advanced Tajweed — Perfect if your child:

Not sure which level? Book a free trial. The tutor will assess your child in the first session and recommend the exact right starting point.

How Long Does the Tajweed Course Take?

Course Classes Per Week Estimated Duration
Basic Tajweed 2 per week 6 – 10 months
Basic Tajweed 3 per week 4 – 7 months
Advanced Tajweed 2 per week 10 – 15 months
Advanced Tajweed 3 per week 6 – 12 months
Basic + Advanced Combined 3 per week 12 – 20 months

Class Duration

45 minutes per session (standard) or 60 minutes (available on request)

Scheduling

Classes are available 7 days a week across all major time zones — morning, afternoon, and evening. You choose the time that works for your family.

What Students & Parents Say About Our Tajweed Course

1,000+ Students Enrolled · 50+ Certified Tutors · 15+ Countries · 5 ★ Average Rating
“My son had been reading Quran for three years but his Tajweed was full of errors — errors I couldn’t even hear because my own Tajweed wasn’t perfect. His Al-Huda tutor identified every single one in the first class. Six months later, I cry when I hear him recite. It is genuinely beautiful.”

Umm Abdullah, Mother of 11-year-old

Birmingham, UK

“I am a convert who learned to read Quran on my own. My pronunciation was all wrong and I didn’t know it. My Al-Huda tutor is the most patient person I have ever met. She corrects me with such kindness and explains every rule so clearly. My recitation has completely transformed.”

Sister Aisha (formerly Claire), Adult student

Toronto, Canada

“What surprised me most was how different the Quran sounds now that my daughter reads it correctly. There is a beauty and a depth to it that wasn’t there before. She recited Surah Al-Fatiha for her grandmother last Ramadan and everyone in the room went quiet. Masha Allah.”

Brother Samir, Father of 12-year-old

Sydney, Australia

Everything Parents Ask Before Enrolling in Tajweed

What is Tajweed and why is it important?
Tajweed is the set of rules governing the correct pronunciation, articulation, and characteristics of every letter in the Quran. It is important because Allah commands “measured recitation” (Tarteel) in the Quran (73:4), because mispronouncing Arabic letters can change the meaning of Quranic words, and because the Prophet ﷺ recited the Quran with Tajweed and his companions preserved that recitation in an unbroken chain to this day.
Children can begin Basic Tajweed from around age 6 — provided they have completed Noorani Qaida or can read Arabic with Harakaat. Very motivated children sometimes start earlier. The key is having a solid foundation in letter recognition and basic reading first.
Basic Tajweed covers the foundational rules — Makhaarij, Sifaat, Noon Sakinah rules, Meem Sakinah rules, basic Madd rules, Qalqalah, Lam rules, and Waqf. Advanced Tajweed goes deeper — covering all 13 types of Madd, complete Ghunnah mastery, Tafkheem and Tarqeeq at speed, Huroof Muqatta’at, and optionally Ijazah preparation.
It depends on the quality of their current recitation. Many students who “can read Quran” have significant Tajweed errors they are not aware of. We recommend booking a free trial class — the tutor will assess your child’s current level in the first session and recommend the appropriate course.
In Ijazah in Tajweed means the tutor has personally recited the entire Quran to their own certified teacher and received approval and authorisation to teach others. That teacher received their Ijazah from their teacher — in a chain that goes back, teacher by teacher, to the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ himself. It is the highest credential in Quranic teaching and the only authentic chain of Quran transmission in Islam.
Yes — one-on-one online Tajweed classes with a qualified tutor are equally effective as in-person classes. The tutor hears every sound the student produces in real time and corrects immediately. Many of our students have achieved Ijazah certification through online classes alone.
Absolutely. It takes longer to unlearn old habits than to learn correctly from the start — but it is entirely achievable with a patient, qualified tutor and consistent practice. Many of our adult students have transformed their recitation completely within 6 to 12 months.
Yes — classes are available 7 days a week including Saturday and Sunday, across all time zones. Weekend classes are particularly popular for school-age children and working adults.
After Advanced Tajweed, students are ready for Ijazah preparation — earning their own chain of Quran authority and the right to teach others. Many students also transition to Quran Memorisation (Hifz) — beginning to commit the Quran to memory with perfect Tajweed already in place.
Yes — completely free, no credit card, no obligation. The free trial is a full 30-minute live session with a certified Ijazah tutor, including a Tajweed level assessment and personalised course recommendation.

The Quran Deserves to Be Recited Correctly. Your Child Deserves to Recite It Beautifully.

There is a sound that every Muslim parent longs to hear — their child’s voice reciting the Quran with precision, with confidence, with that unmistakeable quality that comes only from genuine Tajweed mastery.
Book a free trial class today. In 30 minutes, you will hear the difference that the right tutor makes — and you will understand exactly what your child’s recitation can become.