Online Quran Memorisation Tool UK: How to Use Eaalim's Hifz Exercises (2026 Guide)
By Eaalim Institute on 5/9/2026 · 9 د قراءة
If you are a British Muslim parent supporting your child's Hifz journey — or an adult learner memorising the Qur'an alongside a UK working week — one truth becomes obvious within months: the daily lesson with a teacher is only half the work. The other half is the practice you do alone, between lessons, on the school run, in the kitchen after dinner, in the long British evenings of November and February when motivation is hardest to summon. That is exactly the gap Eaalim's free online Quran memorisation tool fills.
The exercises pair best with a live teacher correcting in real time. For families who have not yet enrolled, the natural entry point is our Learn Quran Online (UK) page — UK-time slots, pounds pricing, free trial included.
This guide explains what the Eaalim Quran Memorisation Exercises library is, how British Muslim families are using it in 2026, and how it pairs with structured one-to-one Hifz lessons to keep memorised juz' solid for life.
What is the Eaalim Quran Memorisation Tool?
The Eaalim Quran Memorisation Exercises is a free, interactive web-based library of self-study drills covering the entire Qur'an, organised by Surah and by ayah. It currently includes over 160 exercise pages spanning every Surah commonly memorised first by British Muslim children — from Juz 'Amma (Surahs 78–114) all the way through to longer Surahs like Al-Hadid, Al-Waqi'ah, Ar-Rahman and Muhammad.
Each exercise page focuses on a specific ayah or page-range and walks the student through three structured drills:
Display — the ayah is shown in clean Mushaf-style Arabic with optional Tajweed colour-coding, so the student first sees what they are memorising as it appears in their printed Mushaf at home.
Recall — parts of the ayah are then hidden, and the student is asked to fill in or recite the missing words from memory. The tool grades accuracy and lets the student repeat as many times as needed.
Revision — the previously memorised ayat from the same Surah are cycled through, supporting the classical Sabqi (recent revision) and Manzil (long revision) parts of a serious Hifz routine.
The whole library is free, requires no account, and works on any modern browser — laptop, tablet or phone. For British Muslim families balancing state school, work and Hifz, the convenience of being able to drill ten minutes during a lunch break or twenty minutes before bed is genuinely transformative.
Who is the tool built for?
The Eaalim memorisation library is most useful for three audiences in the UK:
1. British Muslim children doing Hifz alongside state school
The single largest group. A child memorising on the standard 5-year UK pathway — Juz 'Amma in the first 9 months, then working through the Qur'an in classical reverse-order — uses the tool between live lessons to reinforce the day's Sabaq. Twenty minutes of self-drill on a Tuesday evening replaces the casual revision that traditional madrasahs supervise but that an online learner often misses. UK parents report that adding one daily session of the memorisation tool — usually after Maghrib in winter, before dinner in summer — closes the gap between online and madrasah Hifz almost entirely.
2. British Muslim adults restarting Hifz
If you began memorising as a child, paused for university or career, and want to resume in your 30s or 40s, the tool is a low-friction way to test what is still solid. Pick the Surah you remember most strongly, run a few drills, and you will know within twenty minutes whether your old Hifz is intact or whether you need to relearn from scratch. We hear the same comment over and over from British Muslim adult students: "I thought I still had Juz 'Amma — the tool showed me I had three Surahs." That honest assessment is the starting point for a real adult Hifz pathway.
3. British huffadh maintaining Khatm
The students whose Hifz is most at risk are paradoxically the ones who completed it. Without daily Manzil revision, full Hifz can fade in eighteen months. UK huffadh — particularly young men and women in their twenties starting careers — use the tool to run a rotating revision cycle through every juz', without needing a teacher present. Pair the tool with a modest weekly check-in lesson at Eaalim, and the Qur'an stays as solid at fifty as it was at fifteen.
How to use it well: a British Muslim family's typical week
The tool is most powerful when it is part of a structured weekly rhythm rather than an emergency revision session before Ramadan. A realistic UK family schedule for a child on the 5-year Hifz pathway:
Day | Time | Activity |
|---|---|---|
Monday | 5–5:45pm | Live one-to-one Hifz lesson with Al-Azhar teacher (Sabaq + Sabqi + Manzil) |
Tuesday | after Maghrib, 20 mins | Eaalim memorisation tool: drill yesterday's Sabaq |
Wednesday | 5–5:45pm | Live one-to-one lesson |
Thursday | after Maghrib, 20 mins | Eaalim memorisation tool: revision of last 7 days |
Friday | before Jumu'ah | 10-minute drill on a Surah being revised that week |
Saturday | 10–11am | Live one-to-one lesson + new Sabaq |
Sunday | after Asr | Manzil drill on the tool, parents listening |
Notice how the tool is used between live lessons, never in place of them. That is the right balance. The teacher gives the corrections that only a hafiz can give; the tool gives the unlimited repetitions that no teacher has time for in a 45-minute lesson.
How it pairs with Eaalim's live Hifz course
If you are already a student in Eaalim's online Hifz Course UK, your teacher will typically point you to specific exercise pages in the library that match your current Sabaq and your weakest Manzil areas. This makes the tool genuinely tailored: rather than scrolling through 161 pages, you receive a short list of three to five drill links each week from your teacher, focused on exactly what you need.
If you are not yet enrolled, the tool still works on its own as a starting point — but most British Muslim families find that adding even one weekly thirty-minute live lesson with an Al-Azhar certified hafiz multiplies the value of the self-study drilling. You can book a free trial lesson here to see how the combination feels.
Common British Muslim parent questions
Is the tool genuinely free?
Yes. There is no payment, no account, no email collection, no premium tier. The library is part of Eaalim's free public resources — its purpose is to support Hifz learners across the UK and globally. The paid product is the live one-to-one teaching; the self-study tool sits alongside it as a free service.
Will it work on my child's iPad?
Yes — the tool runs in any modern browser and is designed to work on tablets and phones, not just laptops. UK parents commonly load it on a child's iPad and have them work through fifteen-minute sessions in the kitchen during dinner preparation.
Does it support Tajweed colour-coding?
Yes. The Mushaf displayed in the tool uses Tajweed-friendly colour conventions (heavy letters distinguished from light, madd letters indicated, qalqalah marked) consistent with the Aalim Book methodology. This makes it especially useful for British Muslim children whose live lessons already use the Aalim Book — the visual experience is continuous between lesson and self-study.
How does it differ from Quran apps like Quran.com or Tarteel?
Quran.com is excellent for reading and translation; Tarteel uses voice recognition for recitation correction. The Eaalim tool is built specifically for memorisation drilling — the structured cycle of see-it / hide-it / recall-it that Hifz students need every day. It is complementary to those apps, not a replacement.
Does it cover the whole Qur'an?
The library currently covers all the Surahs that British Muslim children typically memorise in the first three years of Hifz — most of Juz 'Amma plus selected longer Surahs (Al-Hadid, Al-Waqi'ah, Ar-Rahman, Muhammad and others). New Surahs are added regularly. If your child is working on a Surah that isn't yet in the library, ask your Eaalim teacher and we can prioritise it.
Try it now
The fastest way to understand whether the tool fits your family's Hifz routine is to spend ten minutes inside it. Open the Quran Memorisation Exercises library, pick a Surah your child has already memorised (Surah Al-Fatihah, Al-Ikhlas, or Al-Falaq are good starting points), and run one drill. You will see the structure within sixty seconds.
If you would like a personalised pathway through the library — paired with live one-to-one Hifz lessons on UK GMT/BST time slots — book a free trial lesson with an Al-Azhar certified hafiz. We will assess your child's current Hifz, recommend the three or four exercises in the library to start with this week, and confirm a weekly British schedule that fits around school, family and the long British evenings.
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ابدأ تجربتك المجانيةFrequently Asked Questions
Yes. The tool is completely free, requires no account, no payment details and no email collection. It is part of Eaalim's free public resources for British Muslim families and learners worldwide. The paid product at Eaalim is the live one-to-one Hifz course; the self-study tool sits alongside it as a free service.
Yes. The tool runs in any modern browser and is designed to work on tablets and phones, not just laptops. UK parents commonly load it on a child's iPad and have them work through fifteen-minute drilling sessions in the kitchen during dinner preparation, in the back of the car on the school run, or in bed before sleep.
Yes. The Mushaf displayed in the memorisation tool uses Tajweed-friendly colour conventions consistent with the Aalim Book methodology — heavy letters distinguished from light, madd letters indicated, qalqalah marked. This makes it especially useful for British Muslim children whose live lessons already use the Aalim Book.
Quran.com is excellent for reading and translation; Tarteel uses voice recognition for recitation correction. Eaalim's tool is built specifically for memorisation drilling — the structured cycle of see-it / hide-it / recall-it that Hifz students need every day. It is complementary to those apps, not a replacement.
The library currently includes over 161 exercise pages covering all the Surahs that British Muslim children typically memorise in the first three years of Hifz — most of Juz 'Amma plus selected longer Surahs (Al-Hadid, Al-Waqi'ah, Ar-Rahman, Muhammad and others). New Surahs are added regularly. If your child is working on a Surah not yet in the library, ask your Eaalim teacher and we can prioritise it.
Live lessons handle Sabaq (new memorisation) and corrections; the tool handles Sabqi (recent revision) and Manzil (long revision) drilling between lessons. A typical schedule pairs three live lessons per week with three or four 15–20 minute drilling sessions on the tool — usually after Maghrib in winter, before dinner in summer.
Absolutely. Many UK adult students who began Hifz as children, paused for university or career, and want to resume in their 30s or 40s use the tool to first assess what is still solid. Pick a Surah you remember, run a few drills, and you'll know within twenty minutes whether your old Hifz is intact or whether you need to relearn from scratch.
British Muslim families typically use the tool four to six times per week, for 15–25 minutes per session. Common slots: after Maghrib in the long British evenings (Nov–Feb), before dinner on lighter summer evenings, during the school run on a tablet, on Friday afternoons before Jumu'ah, and weekend mornings as part of a longer revision session.
No. The tool is for self-study drilling — it does not replace either a live one-to-one teacher or the community experience of a UK madrasah. Most British Muslim families use it as a third pillar: madrasah (community), Eaalim live lesson (one-to-one teacher), and the memorisation tool (self-paced drilling). The three together give a child what no single one can.
Book a free 30-minute trial lesson with an Al-Azhar certified hafiz at Eaalim. The teacher will assess your or your child's current Hifz level, recommend three to five specific exercise pages to start with this week, and confirm a weekly British schedule that pairs the tool with one-to-one live lessons in GMT/BST.