How to Memorize the Quran in 2 Months?
Key Takeaways
Memorizing the full Quran in 2 months requires completing approximately 10 pages daily across 60 days — an intensive but structured commitment.
The 2-month plan divides the Quran into 8 phases of roughly 75 pages each, with built-in revision days every week.
Non-Arabic speakers must master Tajweed fundamentals before beginning — mispronounced memorization is extremely difficult to correct later.
Daily Muraja’ah of previously memorized pages must accompany new memorization — skipping revision causes irreversible gaps within weeks.
Students who memorize after Fajr and maintain a fixed daily session consistently outperform those with irregular schedules in retention assessments.

Memorizing the Quran in 2 months is one of the most ambitious commitments a Muslim can make — and it is achievable, but only with a mathematically sound plan and an unflinching daily routine. The Quran contains 604 pages across 30 Juz’, which means a genuine 2-month completion requires memorizing roughly 10 pages per day across 60 days. This is the territory of full-time Hifz students with prior Tajweed grounding.

This plan is designed for students who can dedicate 6–10 hours daily to new memorization and Muraja’ah. Each step below reflects a real instructional sequence used with advanced students. If you are a beginner or working adult, explore the structured pace options at Hifz Quran Online Academy before committing to this timeline.

1. Audit Your Tajweed Level Before You Memorize a Single Ayah

Before beginning a 2-month Hifz plan, your Tajweed must meet a minimum functional standard. Memorizing with consistent Tajweed errors embeds those errors permanently — they become part of your muscle memory and are far harder to correct after memorization than before.

The minimum Tajweed requirements for this plan include correct Makhraj (articulation points) for all Arabic letters, basic Ghunnah application on noon and meem mushaddad, Idgham and Ikhfa’ rules for noon sakinah and tanween, and proper Waqf (stopping) and Ibtida’ (resuming) practices. 

A student who cannot read a page of Quran fluently with these rules applied should not begin 10-page daily memorization — the errors compound at pace.

At Hifz Quran Online Academy, students who skip this audit step consistently struggle at the Juz’ 3–4 stage, where Tajweed demands increase significantly. Our Quran Memorization Course includes a Tajweed evaluation in the first session to ensure every student begins on solid ground.

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2. Calculate Your Exact Daily Target Using the 604-Page Framework

To memorize the Quran in 2 months, you must internalize the mathematics of this goal. The Quran contains exactly 604 pages in the standard Madinah Mushaf (15-line Tajweed Quran used globally for Hifz).

Across 60 days, the breakdown works as follows:

WeekDaysNew Pages/DayTotal New PagesCumulative Pages
Weeks 1–2Days 1–1410140140
Weeks 3–4Days 15–2810140280
Weeks 5–6Days 29–4210140420
Weeks 7–8Days 43–5610140560
Final BufferDays 57–601144604

Note: Days 57–60 are reserved for completing the final pages and conducting a full Muraja’ah cycle of the entire Quran.

Every 7th day within this structure should be designated a pure revision day — no new memorization. This means approximately 8 active revision days across the 2 months. This is not optional. Without structured revision days, retention collapses after the first 150 pages.

3. Structure Each Day into Three Non-Negotiable Sessions

Memorizing 10 pages daily requires session architecture, not a single block of study. Attempting to memorize 10 pages in one sitting leads to cognitive overload and shallow retention.

The proven 3-session structure for advanced Hifz students:

Session 1 — Fajr Block (3 hours)

New memorization of 5 pages. This is the most cognitively optimal window — the mind is rested, distractions are minimal, and retention rates are measurably higher. Students at Hifz Quran Online Academy who memorize in the Fajr window consistently demonstrate stronger retention in weekly assessments compared to those using evening sessions.

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Session 2 — Mid-Morning Block (2 hours)

Muraja’ah of the previous 7 days’ new memorization (approximately 60–70 pages by week 2 onward). This is same-week revision — the material is recent enough to reinforce without a full re-memorization effort.

Session 3 — Evening Block (2.5 hours)

New memorization of the remaining 5 pages, followed by a 30-minute review of that day’s full 10-page new portion from memory — without the Mushaf.

4. Apply the Rabṭ Technique to Every New Page Before Moving Forward

Rabṭ — the practice of connecting the final Ayah of a memorized portion to the opening Ayah of the next — is the single most overlooked technique in fast-paced Hifz programs. At 10 pages per day, the risk of memorizing isolated islands of text is significant.

Before completing any new page, recite the last line of the previous page from memory, then flow directly into the new page’s opening. Do this three times consecutively. 

Then recite the new page’s final line and hold it in mind as your anchor for the next session’s opening. This Rabṭ drill takes 5 minutes per page transition and prevents the sequence confusion that becomes catastrophic at the 200-page mark.

The Prophet ﷺ emphasized protecting Quran memorization with consistent review. As recorded in Sahih al-Bukhari (hadith 5032), he described the Quran leaving a person if they do not maintain it — a warning that applies with special force when memorizing at this pace.

5. Implement a Weekly Muraja’ah Cycle That Scales With Your Accumulation

Muraja’ah is not a supplement to memorization — it is half the work. For a 2-month plan, the Muraja’ah load grows every week, and your system must scale with it.

Use this rolling revision framework:

WeekPages Memorized So FarDaily Muraja’ah Target
Week 10–7010–15 pages/day in Session 2
Week 271–14020 pages/day in Session 2
Week 3141–21025–30 pages/day across Sessions 2 & 3
Week 4+210–350+35–40 pages/day; split across all 3 sessions

By week 5, your Muraja’ah load will exceed your new memorization load in time investment. This is correct and expected. Do not reduce revision to accelerate new memorization — that trade-off always results in a weaker final Hifz.

For a deeper understanding of sustainable revision architecture, the structured Muraja’ah strategies covered here are directly applicable to high-pace memorization plans.

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6. Divide the 60 Days into 8 Phases of 75 Pages Each

Psychological momentum is a real factor in Hifz. Students who treat 604 pages as a single mountain lose motivation by week 3. Dividing the Quran into 8 phases of approximately 75 pages creates achievable milestones that sustain daily commitment.

Phase structure:

PhaseApproximate Juz’ CoverageTarget Completion Day
Phase 1Juz’ 1–3 (partial)Day 7–8
Phase 2Juz’ 3–6Day 15
Phase 3Juz’ 7–9Day 22–23
Phase 4Juz’ 10–12Day 30
Phase 5Juz’ 13–15Day 37–38
Phase 6Juz’ 16–18Day 45
Phase 7Juz’ 19–22Day 52–53
Phase 8Juz’ 23–30Day 60

At each phase completion, conduct a full phase review — recite the entire 75-page block from memory before moving to the next phase. This doubles as a Muraja’ah session and a confidence marker.

7. Prioritize the Mutashabihat Surahs to Prevent Confusion at Speed

At 10 pages per day, Mutashabihat — verses that appear similar to one another across different Surahs — become a significant memorization risk. When moving at pace, the mind can conflate Ayaat with similar phrasing, particularly in Juz’ 18–22 where repetition of narrative themes is frequent.

Allocate 15 minutes daily to deliberately drilling similar-sounding Ayaat side by side. Surahs that require special attention for Mutashabihat include Al-Baqarah and Al-Imran (shared thematic vocabulary), the paired narratives in Surat Hud and Surat Al-Shu’ara, and the repeated refrains in Surat Al-Qamar.

8. Use a Certified Hafiz to Test You Every 2 Days

Self-verification is the most dangerous habit in high-pace Hifz. A student memorizing 10 pages daily accumulates errors faster than they can self-detect. Without external testing, those errors layer and solidify.

Every 3 days, recite your new memorization to a certified Hafiz — without the Mushaf, from the beginning of your latest phase. The instructor listens for Tajweed errors, sequencing mistakes, omitted Ayaat, and Makhraj inconsistencies. This is not optional in a 2-month plan — it is the error-correction mechanism that keeps the entire structure sound.

Our Online Quran Memorization Courses for Adults provide scheduled listening sessions with certified Huffaz who specialize in exactly this kind of rapid-pace error detection and correction.

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9. Protect the Final 10 Days for Comprehensive Muraja’ah of All 604 Pages

Days 51–60 should shift from 10-page new memorization targets to full-Quran Muraja’ah mode. By day 50, new memorization should be complete or within the final Juz’. The last 10 days serve one purpose: sealing the entire Hifz with a coherent, connected recitation from Al-Fatihah to An-Nas.

Target reciting 60–80 pages per day during this window across your three sessions. This is achievable for material already memorized — the speed of recitation increases significantly compared to the initial memorization pace.

Complete at least two full Quran recitations from memory within these final 10 days. The second recitation will be measurably more fluent than the first — this confirms that the Hifz is consolidating rather than fading.

To understand what long-term Hifz preservation looks like beyond this 2-month milestone, the full Hafiz pathway guide covers the year-long preservation steps that follow initial completion.

Memorize the Quran at Your Own Pace

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Begin Your Hifz with Expert Guidance at Hifz Quran Online Academy

A 2-month Quran memorization plan demands the right structure from day one. One week of incorrect technique can cost three weeks of correction.

Hifz Quran Online Academy offers:

Book your free trial session today and begin with a plan that actually works.

Choose the program that fits your needs: 

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Frequently Asked Questions About How to Memorize the Quran in 2 Months

Is memorizing the Quran in 2 months realistic for a non-Arabic speaker?

Memorizing the full Quran in 2 months requires approximately 10 pages daily for 60 days — this is achievable only for students who can dedicate 6–10 hours daily, have solid Tajweed grounding, and work with a certified instructor. For most non-Arabic speakers, a 6–12 month structured plan produces stronger, more durable Hifz.

How many hours per day does a 2-month Quran memorization plan require?

A genuine 2-month Hifz plan requires a minimum of 8 hours daily — split across three sessions covering new memorization and Muraja’ah. As the accumulated memorization grows past 200 pages, the daily revision load increases and total daily commitment often reaches 9–12 hours.

What is the biggest mistake students make in fast-paced Hifz plans?

The most consistent error observed in fast-paced Hifz programs is neglecting Muraja’ah in favor of pushing forward with new memorization. Students often feel productive adding new pages while their earlier memorization quietly deteriorates. By week 4, the result is fragmented Hifz where no portion is securely retained.

What should I do after completing the 2-month Quran memorization plan?

Completing new memorization is the beginning of Hifz, not the end. The 12 months following completion are the highest-risk period for loss. A structured post-completion Muraja’ah schedule — reciting at minimum one Juz’ daily — is required to transition from fresh memorization to stable, lasting Hifz. The Quran memorization schedule framework provides a practical post-completion revision system.

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