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Digital Tasbih Counter

A digital tasbih counter lets you count Dhikr — Tasbih, Tahmid, Takbir, or any remembrance — by tapping instead of moving prayer beads. Tap the circle below, set a target of 33, 99, or 100, and watch your progress fill in. Your count lives only in this browser tab for this session and resets on reload — nothing is saved or sent anywhere.

Tap anywhere on the circle, or press Space / Enter when it's focused.

How does a digital tasbih counter work?

Each tap adds one to the running total, the same way sliding a bead does on a physical tasbih. Choose a target — 33, 99, or 100 are the most common in daily Dhikr — and the gold ring around the counter fills in as you approach it, with a short vibration on supported phones each time you tap.

Why do Muslims count Dhikr in sets of 33?

After each of the five daily prayers, it's recommended to say SubhanAllah (Glory be to Allah), Alhamdulillah (praise be to Allah), and Allahu Akbar (Allah is greatest) 33 times each. This comes from a hadith in Sahih Muslim (595), where the Prophet ﷺ taught the poor among his companions this practice as a way to match the spiritual reward of those wealthy enough to give in charity.

Does this counter save my count if I close the page?

No — and that's intentional. The number is held only in your browser's memory for the current session. Reloading the page, closing the tab, or navigating away resets it to zero. Nothing about your Dhikr count is stored on your device or sent to any server.

Does the counter vibrate with each tap?

On Android phones and other devices that support the Vibration API, each tap triggers a short haptic pulse so you can count without looking at the screen. iOS Safari currently doesn't allow websites to trigger vibration, so on iPhone the tap still counts normally, just without the haptic feedback.

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Frequently asked

How does a digital tasbih counter work?

Each tap or click adds one to the count shown on screen, the same way moving a bead does on a physical tasbih. You can set a target of 33, 99, or 100, and the counter shows your progress as you go.

Why do Muslims count Dhikr in sets of 33?

After each obligatory prayer, it's recommended to say SubhanAllah, Alhamdulillah, and Allahu Akbar 33 times each, based on a hadith in Sahih Muslim (595) where the Prophet ﷺ taught this to the poor companions as a way to match the reward of those who could give charity.

Does this counter save my count if I close the page?

No. The count is held only in your browser's memory for that session and resets when you reload or leave the page — nothing is saved to your device or sent to a server. This is intentional: the tool stores nothing about you.

Does the counter vibrate with each tap?

On phones that support the Vibration API (most Android browsers), each tap gives a short haptic pulse. iOS Safari does not currently allow websites to trigger vibration, so on iPhone the counter works the same but without the haptic feedback.

Can I use this without an internet connection?

Once the page has loaded, the counter itself runs entirely in your browser and needs no ongoing connection. You do need internet the first time the page loads.

Related reading

Tasbih after salah: the 33-33-34 explained → After-prayer athkar: what to say when you finish salah →