Core module
01 / 05Schedule
Your day, anchored to salah
Prayer times shape your timeline — not the other way around.
A day with Tasleem
4:00 AM
Fasting
5:25 AM
Tahajjud
5:55 AM
Fajr
6:25 AM
Morning Adhkar
6:45 AM
Quran
7:30 AM
Dhuha
9:00 AM
Work
1:21 PM
Dhuhr
4:46 PM
Asr
6:59 PM
Evening Adhkar
7:29 PM
Maghrib
8:45 PM
Isha
9:25 PM
Deen Study
9:35 PM
Reflection
9:45 PM
Bedtime Adhkar
4:00 AM
Fasting
5:25 AM
Tahajjud
5:55 AM
Fajr
6:25 AM
Morning Adhkar
6:45 AM
Quran
7:30 AM
Dhuha
9:00 AM
Work
1:21 PM
Dhuhr
4:46 PM
Asr
6:59 PM
Evening Adhkar
7:29 PM
Maghrib
8:45 PM
Isha
9:25 PM
Deen Study
9:35 PM
Reflection
9:45 PM
Bedtime Adhkar
- 4:00 AM: Fasting (Voluntary)
- 5:25 AM: Tahajjud (Voluntary)
- 5:55 AM: Fajr (Obligatory)
- 6:25 AM: Morning Adhkar (Sunnah)
- 6:45 AM: Quran (Sunnah)
- 7:30 AM: Dhuha (Voluntary)
- 9:00 AM: Work (Knowledge)
- 1:21 PM: Dhuhr (Obligatory)
- 4:46 PM: Asr (Obligatory)
- 6:59 PM: Evening Adhkar (Sunnah)
- 7:29 PM: Maghrib (Obligatory)
- 8:45 PM: Isha (Obligatory)
- 9:25 PM: Deen Study (Knowledge)
- 9:35 PM: Reflection (Knowledge)
- 9:45 PM: Bedtime Adhkar (Sunnah)
The problem
Most Muslims start the day with a calendar app, a prayer app like Muslim Pro or Athan, a Quran reminder, and a habit tracker — each with its own logic and its own alerts. You check Fajr in one place, slot Quran reading into a generic to-do list, and hope a fasting reminder fires at the right time.
The result is a day that *looks* organized but isn't truly prayer-anchored. When prayer times shift — Ramadan, daylight saving, or a flight to a new timezone — your scattered tools don't rebuild together. You end up manually re-planning, or worse, letting good intentions slip because nothing holds the day together.
How Tasleem helps
Tasleem Schedule treats salah as the spine of your day. Your five prayers become fixed anchors; Quran, adhkar, fasting, learning, and personal tasks slot into the windows *between* them — automatically.
When you travel or your location changes, the entire timeline rebuilds around updated prayer times. Hijri observances — White Days, Monday/Thursday fasts, Ramadan — appear on your calendar with context, not as disconnected reminders. One schedule, one system, connected to every other Deen OS module.
Key features
Prayer-anchored timeline — Quran, adhkar, fasting, and habits between each salah
Hijri-aware calendar with Friday fasts, White Days, and seasonal observances
Smart reminders tied to your actual day structure, not generic alarms
Automatic rebuild when you travel or prayer times shift
Integrated with Prayer, Quran, Learning, and Progress modules
Schedule guides for authentic how-to on prayer, fasting, and daily habits
How it compares
| Aspect | Typical apps | Tasleem |
|---|---|---|
| Day structure | Generic calendar or to-do apps treat all tasks equally — prayer is just another item on the list. | Salah is the spine. Everything else flows between Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha. |
| Travel & timezone changes | You update prayer times in Muslim Pro, Athan, or similar — then manually adjust Quran, fasting, and habits elsewhere. | Change location once — the full prayer-anchored schedule rebuilds automatically. |
| Islamic observances | Hijri dates may appear in a widget, but fasting and worship habits live in separate trackers. | Ramadan, voluntary fasts, and Hijri events are woven into the same timeline you live by daily. |
| Connection to worship | Popular prayer apps handle adhan well — but Quran, fasting, and study still live in separate apps with no shared timeline. | Schedule, Prayer, Quran, and Progress share one context so your day feels like one Deen, not six apps. |
Connected modules
Real scenarios
Scenario 1
You land in a new city — open Tasleem, and your entire day reshapes around local prayer times without re-entering anything.
Scenario 2
Ramadan begins — suhoor, iftar, taraweeh, and voluntary fasts appear in context on the same timeline you use year-round.
Scenario 3
You want to read Quran after Fajr and study seerah before Maghrib — both habits live in the natural gaps between salah.
Scenario 4
Monday and Thursday come around — your schedule already knows these are sunnah fasting days and surfaces them gently.
Scenario 5
A busy work week threatens consistency — one prayer-anchored view shows what matters today, not a overwhelming generic task list.