Before memorisation begins, every new student goes through a comprehensive readiness assessment. This is the most important step — because starting Hifz without the right foundation leads to slow progress, frustration, and errors that are difficult to correct later.
A student must be able to read the Quran fluently with correct Tajweed before beginning Hifz. A student who cannot read Arabic correctly will memorise incorrectly — and errors memorised are far harder to correct than errors in reading. If a student is not yet ready, we place them in the Quran Reading or Tajweed course first, then transition to Hifz.
For most students, Hifz begins with Juz Amma — the 30th and final section of the Quran. These are the shortest Surahs, the most commonly recited, and the most immediately applicable in daily prayer. Memorising Juz Amma gives a student a complete, usable library of memorised Quran from the very beginning.
Starting from the shorter Surahs and building up:
Surah Al-Fatiha and Ayat ul Kursi are memorised early — as they are recited in every prayer and their memorisation is of immediate practical value.
After completing Juz Amma, students continue backward through the Quran — moving into Juz 29, then 28, and so on. This reverse order means students always move from shorter, more manageable Surahs to progressively longer ones — building confidence and capacity systematically.
Each day, the student memorises a small, precisely measured new portion — typically 3–10 verses depending on length, difficulty, and the student’s daily capacity. The tutor sets the exact portion each day based on the previous lesson’s performance.
The student revises the last 7–10 days of new memorisation — keeping recently memorised verses fresh while new ones are being added.
All previously memorised Surahs are systematically revised in rotation — ensuring nothing is forgotten while new material is being learned. Every Surah is revisited at regular intervals.
Every week, the student recites the full week’s new memorisation to the tutor from memory — with no looking. The tutor evaluates fluency, accuracy, and Tajweed correctness before approving progress to new verses.
The complete memorisation of all 30 Juz — from Surah Al-Fatiha through to Surah An-Nas.
Surah Al-Baqarah (286 verses — the longest Surah), Surah Al-Imran (200 verses), Surah An-Nisa (176 verses), and the long Makki Surahs all require specific strategies:
The moment a student completes the memorisation of the entire Quran is one of the most celebrated in a Muslim family’s life. Al-Huda marks this milestone with a formal completion session with the tutor — and the student’s Ijazah journey begins.
Memorisation is only half of Hifz. The other half — the harder half — is keeping what has been memorised. A Hafiz who does not revise regularly loses their memorisation within months.
After completing Hifz, students enter a structured revision programme designed to consolidate their entire memorisation over 3–6 months — reciting the full Quran systematically to their tutor, with every error identified and corrected.
How to divide the Quran into daily revision segments — completing the full review of the entire Quran every 30 days (1 Juz per day), every 20 days, or every 10 days for advanced students.
For students who wish to earn formal certification of their complete Hifz: