← Back to blog
Athkar 5 min read

How long should morning and evening athkar actually take

People tend to fall into one of two camps on this. Either they've never started because they assume athkar means a 20-to-30-minute ritual they can't fit anywhere, or they have started, finish in under two minutes, and quietly worry they're doing it wrong. Neither assumption is based on an actual number, so here's the honest one.

The real numbers

These are the actual, complete versions, done at an unhurried pace:

All four are legitimate. None of them is the "lesser" version of the others.

Where the time actually goes

The 10-to-15-minute figure for morning athkar isn't ten minutes of reading. Almost the entire gap between the short core version and the complete list comes from one item repeated a hundred times — saying "Subhanallahi wa bihamdih" a hundred times in the morning and again in the evening.

Source: Sahih al-Bukhari 6405 and Sahih Muslim 2691, narrated by Abu Hurairah.

Every other item on the full list combined — Ayat al-Kursi, the Three Quls, Sayyid al-Istighfar, and the rest — takes under three minutes to read at a normal pace. The duas themselves were never the slow part. The hundred-count repetitions are.

You don't need the hundred-count version to start

The Prophet ﷺ was asked which deeds Allah loves most and answered: the most regular and constant ones, even if they're small — and warned against taking on more than you can sustain.

Source: Sahih al-Bukhari 6465 and Sahih Muslim 782, narrated by Aisha.

A 90-second core version said every single day fits that standard better than a 15-minute version attempted once and abandoned a week later. There's no rule that says you have to arrive at the full list before the practice "counts."

A realistic starting timeline

Start with three items — Ayat al-Kursi, the Three Quls, and Sayyid al-Istighfar. That's roughly 90 seconds to two minutes, and it's a complete, legitimate routine on its own. Once that feels automatic rather than effortful, add one more item. Work up toward the full list over weeks or months, not on day one. The people who end up doing the complete 10-to-15-minute version consistently are almost always the ones who built up to it gradually, not the ones who tried to start there.

A practical note

The two or three minutes a core routine actually takes rarely get lost to a lack of time — they get lost to distraction in the minutes right after Fajr or Asr. Pray auto-blocks the apps most likely to eat that window the moment your Salah or Adhkar time begins, calculated on your device, so the short version you actually intend to do has a real chance of happening.

Protect this habit, not just read about it

Pray auto-blocks distractions at Salah and Adhkar time, calculated on your device.

Join the waitlist

Frequently asked

How long does the full morning athkar list take?

Roughly 10 to 15 minutes at an unhurried pace, if you complete every item including the hundred-times repetitions. Most people build up to that gradually rather than starting there.

How long does the full evening athkar list take?

Around 8 to 10 minutes, slightly shorter than the morning list, again assuming you complete the full hundred-count item.

Why does athkar "take so long" if the individual duas are short?

Because almost all of that time comes from one or two items said 100 times each, not from reading the duas themselves. Every other item on the list combined takes under three minutes to read at a normal pace.

Do I have to do the hundred-times repetitions to get any benefit?

No. The Prophet ﷺ described the most beloved deeds as the ones done consistently, even if small - a shorter version said every day outperforms a complete version attempted once and abandoned.

What's a realistic time commitment for someone just starting?

About 90 seconds to 2 minutes for a core set of three items. That's a legitimate, complete starting point - not a lesser version of the "real" practice.

Related reading

Morning athkar: complete list, Arabic, meaning → Evening athkar: complete list, Arabic, meaning → Athkar for beginners: a realistic daily routine →