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Dua is defined as any invocation or prayer addressed to Allah. It is the essence of ibadah or worship. Dua should be the first and the last resort of the believer, as it is at its core a conversation with Allah. Perspectives on the ideal timing, presentation, and phrasing of dua can vary widely among the faithful, but there is universal agreement that you must approach dua with humility, clarity, submission, and certainty that Allah will hear and respond.

Method 1
Method 1 of 3:

Choosing When to Make Dua

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  1. Different traditions within Islam have varying opinions upon the proper or best time to make dua. Some believers, for instance, contend that it is most appropriate to invoke dua during prostration in prayer (sajdah).[1]
    • Others find it appropriate to offer dua at any point during prayer, including opening or closing prayer with it, but either way each of the five daily salah provide a perfect opportunity to make dua.
    • It is always required to perform wudu (ritual washing) and face qibla (toward the Kaaba in Mecca) during salah.
  2. No matter when you deem it most appropriate to make dua, it is essential that you put yourself in the proper frame of mind. Eliminate all distractions and maintain a singular focus on offering dua. Remember that you are conversing directly with Allah.[2]
    • Losing focus could be seen as an insult to Allah. It brings the sincerity of your offers and requests into doubt, incurring Allah's displeasure.
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  3. Invoking dua is not about making demands, bargaining, or assuming that you know what is best for you. Rather, it is an opportunity to submit yourself to the will of Allah with gratefulness and certainty. Make dua when you have full confidence that you will be heard and responded to.[3]
    • As a believer, you can rest assured that Allah never fails to respond to dua. However, you must accept that the response may differ from what you (pridefully) assume is best for you.
    • Sometimes we may not even realize that Allah has answered our dua. If Allah does not give you something that you ask for, then it is because He is responding in a way that is better for you.
  4. It is very appropriate to offer dua when you are filled with joy and gratitude for the many blessings in your life. It is equally appropriate to do so when you are facing great difficulties and need help and guidance. In any case, always embrace the certainty that you will be heard and that you are never forgotten.[4]
    • So long as you can summon up the requisite focus, humility, submission and hope, then there’s never a wrong time to ask dua.
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Method 2
Method 2 of 3:

Phrasing Your Invocation

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  1. Differences of opinion exist about whether dua should be made only in Arabic, or if it’s fine to use your native language. However, no matter the language you use, make sure you fully comprehend what you’re saying. Otherwise, you’re not having a true conversation with Allah.[5]
    • For instance, some people recite well-known duas in Arabic without having any idea what the words mean. Instead, if you’re using Arabic even though it’s not your first language, study translations so you know what your dua means.
    • Those in favor of making dua in any language, not just Arabic, point out that Allah created all languages and therefore always understands you.[6]
  2. You may be tempted to think that a dua should be full of big, complicated words and flowery, highfalutin phrasing. However, the opposite is true. You should use language that is plain, clear, and free of excess wording or other ostentation. Essentially, you should just get to the point of the matter.[7]
    • Excessive or intentionally rhyming prose can distract you and detract from the clarity of your message. Speak in plain language instead.
    • Repeating the entire dua multiple times—3 is a common recommendation—is, however, a good way to sharpen your focus and demonstrate your persistence.
    • Use a normal speaking tone—don’t whisper as if you are embarrassed to be overheard, and don’t shout as though you are showing off.
    • Many Muslims cry when making dua. This is perfectly normal but don’t manufacture tears for the sake of appearances. Be genuine in your emotion by thinking about the consequences of disobeying Allah.
  3. There are different ways to do this based on the language used and differing traditions within Islam, but most duas start with some form of “O Allah.” It’s important to invoke Allah’s beautiful name at the beginning to make it clear that you are making a direct entreaty.[8]
    • Always start your dua by praising Allah, for example by acknowledging His might, majesty and wisdom, and thanking Him for all that He has provided.
    • It is strictly forbidden to direct a dua toward anyone other than Allah. It is not possible, nor is it necessary, for anyone living or dead to intercede on your behalf.
  4. If you're having trouble coming up with the right words to express yourself, it's always appropriate to recite duas spoken by other wise believers, especially the Prophet Muhammad. Duas offered by the Prophet are found in the Quran and the Hadith (the collection of his sayings). The Prophet was given the gift of profound clarity and concision, so these duas are ideally phrased and focused.[9]
    • That said, make sure you can fully understand and embrace the duas you recite, whether they come from the Prophetic tradition or the Quran. Choose duas that are fully appropriate to the feelings and desires you wish to convey.
    • There are many beautiful duas from the Sunnah that can be recited throughout the day, for example on waking and going to sleep, entering or leaving the bathroom, before eating, sneezing, even before marital relations.
    • In addition to the Prophet’s duas, you can search online for duas that are suited to many life circumstances, and which are in English or other languages.[10]
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Method 3
Method 3 of 3:

Deciding What to Ask for and Offer

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  1. Some people mistakenly interpret dua as strictly an opportunity to make requests. However, it’s important to view dua as a conversation with Allah, which makes it a very appropriate time to unburden yourself and seek forgiveness.[11]
    • Acknowledge your sins, however small they may seem. Promise to Allah that you will not repeat them and ask for forgiveness.
    • You might, for instance, ask forgiveness for treating a friend poorly, and then ask for the strength to overcome selfish impulses and treat others with care and respect.
    • Whether you’re confessing or requesting, use concise, direct language, and always remain focused, humble, faithful and fearful.
  2. It’s great to make dua requests for general blessings like health or wisdom. That said, if you have a specific blessing in mind, spell it out plainly and ask for it. For example, you might say “O Allah, help me to perform well on the exam tomorrow that I have prepared for.”[12]
    • It is accepted among believers that all legitimate dua requests are answered by Allah, and that the answer will always be for the best, but that it may not be the answer you expected.
  3. You should always feel free to make dua requests for the health, welfare, and right-thinking of loved ones, friends, the faithful at large, and even your enemies. Making requests for the benefit of others displays humility and surrender to the will of Allah.[13]
    • You may find that when you request blessings for others, those same blessings will be showered upon you as well. For instance, if you regularly invoke dua for the benefit of a friend in ill health, you may find that both of you become blessed with improved health.
  4. It is never appropriate to use dua to request that harm or misfortune befall others. For example, don’t request that your incompetent boss be fired, but rather ask that they be blessed with improved abilities.[14]
    • Likewise, don’t make negative requests directed toward yourself. For instance, do not ask for death if you are suffering, but instead ask for healing or for the strength to surrender yourself to Allah’s will and bear your burden.
    • Asking Allah for redemption from Hellfire (Jahannam) should be a regular part of every Muslim's daily duas.
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Community Q&A

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  • Question
    Is it acceptable to make dua for my parents who passed away?
    Community Answer
    Community Answer
    Yes. It is very important to make dua for those who passed away. All your duas will reach and benefit the dead ones.
  • Question
    What does "repent and try to make amends" mean?
    Hammad Abdullah
    Hammad Abdullah
    Community Answer
    It means to return back to Allah and ask for forgiveness. No matter what you have done, no matter how much bad you have done, if you ask forgiveness from Allah, from the bottom of your heart sincerely, he will definitely 100% forgive you. As he says in the Quran "he is oft forgiving."
  • Question
    Can I make dua in my own language and then send blessings to the prophet in Arabic?
    Sobi
    Sobi
    Top Answerer
    Shaykh al-Islam Ibn Taymiyah said that it is permissible to make du’aa’ in Arabic and in languages other than Arabic. Allaah knows the intention of the supplicant and what he wants, no matter what language he speaks, because He hears all the voices in all different languages, asking for all kinds of needs.
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Tips

Tips from our Readers

  • Be patient. You may not get your Dua answered right away, but Allah looks for those who are willing to wait.
  • Remember that Allah will sometimes give you what's right for you, even if it's not what you asked for.
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Warnings

  • Don't just dream for Jannat. Work for it by helping people in need, loving and believing in Allah, and not listening to shaytan the devil.
  • Do not make dua against family and property, or for sinful acts.
  • It is absolutely prohibited to seek the intercession of the dead. This is a major act of shirk and makes one a disbeliever. You can only request things from the living and what is within their means (e.g. you cannot ask someone to grant you Paradise). Evidence (translated):[15] [16]
    • An-Nu'man bin Bashir (May Allah be pleased with them) reported: The Prophet (ﷺ) said, "Du'a (supplication) is worship." [Riyad as-Salihin Book 17, Hadith 1465][17] Therefore, supplicating to other than Allah is to worship them and is a major sin.
    • "Unquestionably, for Allah is the pure religion. And those who take protectors besides Him [say], "We only worship them that they may bring us nearer to Allah in position." Indeed, Allah will judge between them concerning that over which they differ. Indeed, Allah does not guide he who is a liar and [confirmed] disbeliever." [39:3][18]
    • "And who is more astray than he who invokes besides Allah those who will not respond to him until the Day of Resurrection, and they, of their invocation, are unaware.
      And when the people are gathered [that Day], they [who were invoked] will be enemies to them, and they will be deniers of their worship." [46:5-6][19]
    • "And whoever invokes besides Allah another deity for which he has no proof - then his account is only with his Lord. Indeed, the disbelievers will not succeed." [23:117][20]
    • "Indeed, you will not make the dead hear, nor will you make the deaf hear the call when they have turned their backs retreating." [27:80][21]
    • "And not equal are the living and the dead. Indeed, Allah causes to hear whom He wills, but you cannot make hear those in the graves." [35:22][22]
    • "Muhammad is not but a messenger. [Other] messengers have passed on before him. So if he was to die or be killed, would you turn back on your heels [to unbelief]? And he who turns back on his heels will never harm Allah at all; but Allah will reward the grateful." [3:144][23]
    • "Verily, you (O Muhammad) will die, and verily, they (too) will die." [39:30][24]
    • "And We granted not to any human being immortality before you (O Muhammad); then if you die, would they live forever?" [21:34][25]
    • Qur'an 3:169-171 and Qur'an 2:154 do not imply that martyrs can hear the outside world. Rather, they are in Jannah (Paradise) being rewarded.[26]
    • "... And those whom you invoke other than Him do not possess [as much as] the membrane of a date seed.
      If you invoke them, they do not hear your supplication; and if they heard, they would not respond to you. And on the Day of Resurrection they will deny your association. And none can inform you like [one] Acquainted [with all matters].
      O mankind, you are those in need of Allah, while Allah is the Free of need, the Praiseworthy." [35:13-15][27]
    • "And [He revealed] that the masjids are for Allah, so do not invoke with Allah anyone.
      And that when the Servant of Allah stood up supplicating Him, they almost became about him a compacted mass."
      Say, [O Muhammad], "I only invoke my Lord and do not associate with Him anyone."
      Say, "Indeed, I do not possess for you [the power of] harm or right direction."
      Say, "Indeed, there will never protect me from Allah anyone [if I should disobey], nor will I find in other than Him a refuge."
      [72:18–22][28]
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About This Article

Christopher M. Osborne, PhD
Co-authored by:
wikiHow Staff Writer
This article was co-authored by wikiHow staff writer, Christopher M. Osborne, PhD. Christopher Osborne has been a wikiHow Content Creator since 2015. He is also a historian who holds a PhD from The University of Notre Dame and has taught at universities in and around Pittsburgh, PA. His scholarly publications and presentations focus on his research interests in early American history, but Chris also enjoys the challenges and rewards of writing wikiHow articles on a wide range of subjects. This article has been viewed 645,477 times.
155 votes - 97%
Co-authors: 51
Updated: March 26, 2023
Views: 645,477
Categories: Muslim Prayer
Article SummaryX

To ask dua, start by invoking the name of Allah to make your intention clear. Then, recite your dua using concise, direct language, avoiding complicated or flowery words. You can ask Allah for blessings upon yourself and others, confess your shortcomings, or ask for forgiveness, depending on what's on your mind. However, never make negative requests directed at yourself or others. If you're having trouble coming up with your own duas, try reciting some of the Prophet's duas, which can be found in the Quran and the Hadith. To learn how to choose when to make dua, keep reading!

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