How to Memorize Surah Al-Mulk in 30 Days
Surah Al-Mulk is one of the most beloved surahs to memorize because of its themes, rhythm, and the many reminders scholars mention about its benefit and virtue. For many people, it feels like the perfect place to build momentum: not too short that it is over in a day, and not so long that it feels out of reach. If you have wanted a practical goal, Al-Mulk is an excellent surah to approach with calm consistency.
A simple 30-day method works well because the surah has 30 ayat. That means you can take one new ayah per day for the first 30 days, then dedicate day 30 to a full review from beginning to end. This removes decision fatigue. You do not need to wonder how much to memorize each day. You only need to show up, learn one ayah carefully, and connect it to what came before it.
The 30-day plan
Start each session by reading the new ayah several times from the mushaf, paying attention to pronunciation and tajweed. Recite it aloud until it feels stable, then repeat it without looking as much as you can. Once the new ayah begins to settle, go back and recite from ayah one all the way to your newest ayah. This step matters. The goal is not to collect isolated lines, but to build a connected flow of recitation.
How to review properly
Daily review is what makes this plan strong. After learning each new ayah, recite from the beginning of the surah so the earlier verses stay fresh. If you only focus on the newest line, the first week of work may begin to weaken by the second week. Even a short five-minute review can protect what you already learned. On day 30, slow down and review the whole surah with care, noting any ayat that still need extra attention.
Common mistakes to avoid
The most common mistake is rushing. Some people try to take multiple ayat when their schedule or energy does not support it, and then they lose confidence after a few days. Another mistake is skipping review days and assuming they will catch up later. In practice, that backlog grows quickly. It also helps to avoid memorizing without paying attention to tajweed. Clean repetition from the start usually saves time later and makes your recitation more stable.
How MurajaMate helps
MurajaMate supports this kind of plan by turning a good intention into a repeatable routine. It can schedule your daily hifz target, keep your review visible, and let you track verse-level confidence so you know which parts feel weak or strong. Instead of relying on memory alone to organize your sessions, you can open the planner and see what needs attention today. That structure is often the difference between a plan that lasts three days and one that lasts the full month.
If you begin today, you do not need to think about all 30 days at once. Focus on the ayah in front of you, review what came before, and trust that steady effort adds up. By the end of the month, you may be surprised at how natural the surah feels on your tongue. Small daily consistency, with sincere intention, can carry you much further than occasional bursts of motivation.