Almost every Muslim has resolved to pray five times a day on time — and then watched that resolve quietly fade. Sabr Prayer exists for the gap between intention and habit. Our writing is practical rather than preachy: small systems, honest tracking, and a gentleness toward yourself that makes consistency possible.
The name comes from sabr — patience and perseverance. Building a prayer habit is rarely a straight line. It wobbles, it breaks, and it has to be rebuilt, often more than once. The Muslims who pray reliably are not the ones who never struggled. They are the ones who kept coming back. Everything here is written in that spirit.
What you will find here
Guides on building the salah habit from scratch, restarting after a long gap, catching every prayer window, understanding and clearing missed prayers, conquering Fajr, and tracking your progress in a way that motivates rather than shames. We focus on the how, not the lecture.
A note on religious rulings
The content on this site is educational and practical. It is not a substitute for scholarly guidance. Matters of fiqh — the precise rulings on prayer, qada, and worship — differ between schools of thought, and for your own situation you should consult a qualified local scholar.
The Sabr app
This site is the companion to Sabr, a free, offline-first prayer and Quran consistency tracker built around the rhythm of the five daily prayers. Much of what we write about — accurate prayer times, per-prayer streaks, honest stats, gentle reminders — is exactly what the app is designed to make effortless.