بِسْمِ اللَّهِ الرَّحْمَنِ الرَّحِيمِ
💚 Pillar Guide · Health & Healing in Islam

Islamic Duas for Health
& Healing — The Complete Guide

الشِّفَاءُ لِلَّهِ وَحْدَهُ — Healing belongs to Allah alone

Discover authentic Quranic verses, prophetic supplications, and Tibb al-Nabawi wisdom for physical, mental, and spiritual well-being. Every dua sourced from the Quran and authentic Hadith.

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🌿 Foundation

What Does Health & Healing Mean in Islam?

Islam presents a deeply holistic view of well-being — encompassing the body, mind, heart, and spirit as an inseparable whole.

🫀

Physical Health (Sihhah)

The body is an amanah (trust) from Allah. Protecting it through halal food, cleanliness (taharah), and medical care is an Islamic obligation — not merely a personal choice.

🧠

Mental & Emotional Health

Islam recognizes grief, anxiety, and sadness as real conditions. The Quran explicitly addresses emotional distress and guides believers toward inner peace through dhikr and tawakkul.

Spiritual Well-being (Ruh)

The purification of the soul (tazkiyah al-nafs) is central to Islamic healing. A heart connected to Allah through prayer and remembrance is the foundation of lasting well-being.

“Indeed, Allah has not sent down a disease except that He has also sent down its cure.”

— Prophet Muhammad ﷺ | Sahih al-Bukhari 5678

This famous hadith forms the cornerstone of Islamic medical ethics. It affirms that seeking treatment is not only permissible but encouraged in Islam. Scholars like Ibn al-Qayyim elaborated extensively on the relationship between spiritual healing (al-tibb al-ruhani) and physical medicine in his landmark work Zad al-Ma’ad. Unlike approaches that see faith and medicine as competing, Islam sees them as complementary paths to Allah’s mercy.

📖 Quranic Guidance

Quranic Verses on Health & Healing

The Quran describes itself as a shifa — a healing — for what is in the hearts. These verses are recited for physical recovery, spiritual cure, and emotional peace.

وَنُنَزِّلُ مِنَ الْقُرْآنِ مَا هُوَ شِفَاءٌ وَرَحْمَةٌ لِّلْمُؤْمِنِينَ

“And We send down of the Quran that which is a healing and a mercy for the believers.”

— Surah Al-Isra (17:82)

📖 Surah Al-Fatiha · The Opener

بِسْمِ اللَّهِ الرَّحْمَنِ الرَّحِيمِ ۝ الْحَمْدُ لِلَّهِ رَبِّ الْعَالَمِينَ

Bismillah ir-rahman ir-raheem. Al-hamdu lillahi rabb il-‘alameen…

Al-Fatiha is called Umm al-Quran (Mother of the Quran) and considered among the greatest healing surahs. The Prophet ﷺ demonstrated its use as a ruqyah for illness.

📚 Sahih al-Bukhari 5736 — Used as Ruqyah

Read Full Surah →
📖 Surah Al-Anbiya · 21:83

وَأَيُّوبَ إِذْ نَادَىٰ رَبَّهُ أَنِّي مَسَّنِيَ الضُّرُّ وَأَنتَ أَرْحَمُ الرَّاحِمِينَ

Wa ayyooba idh naada rabbahu anni massani-yadurru wa anta arhamu-r-raahimeen

The dua of Prophet Ayyub (Job) ﷺ — recited during severe illness and hardship. Allah responded to this supplication and removed his affliction completely.

📚 Quran 21:83 — Dua of Prophet Ayyub ﷺ

View Full Dua →

📊 Most Recited Surahs & Verses for Healing

Based on scholarly consensus and authentic hadith narrations

Al-Fatiha (1)
Ruqyah
Al-Baqarah (2:255)
Ayat al-Kursi
Al-Isra (17:82)
Shifa Verse
Al-Anbiya (21:83)
Dua of Ayyub
Al-Nas & Al-Falaq
Protection
Yunus (10:57)
Heart Healing

Source: Scholarly consensus from IslamQA.info & Sunnah.com

🤲 Supplications

Essential Duas for Health & the Sick

These prophetically verified supplications can be recited by the sick person or by someone making dua on their behalf.

🌿 When Visiting the Sick — Ruqyah Dua

اللَّهُمَّ رَبَّ النَّاسِ، أَذْهِبِ الْبَأْسَ، اشْفِ أَنْتَ الشَّافِي، لَا شِفَاءَ إِلَّا شِفَاؤُكَ، شِفَاءً لَا يُغَادِرُ سَقَمًا

Allahumma Rabb al-naas, adh-hib al-ba’s, ishfi anta al-shaafi, la shifaa’a illa shifaa’uka, shifaa’an la yughadiru saqama

“O Allah, Lord of mankind, remove the affliction. Cure, for You are the Healer. There is no cure except Your cure — a cure that leaves no illness behind.”

📚 Sahih al-Bukhari 5675 & Sahih Muslim 2191 — Recite 7 times over the sick

Read Full Guide →
💧 For Pain Relief — Place Hand on Affected Area

بِسْمِ اللَّهِ (×3) — أَعُوذُ بِاللَّهِ وَقُدْرَتِهِ مِنْ شَرِّ مَا أَجِدُ وَأُحَاذِرُ (×7)

Bismillah (×3) — A’udhu billahi wa qudratihi min sharri ma ajidu wa uhadhiru (×7)

“In the name of Allah (×3) — I seek refuge in Allah and His power from the evil of what I feel and what I fear.” (Repeat 7 times)

📚 Sahih Muslim 2202 — Place your right hand on the place of pain

View Full Dua →
☀️ Dua for Complete Recovery

أَسْأَلُ اللَّهَ الْعَظِيمَ رَبَّ الْعَرْشِ الْعَظِيمِ أَنْ يَشْفِيَكَ

As’alu-llah al-‘adheem, Rabb al-‘arsh al-‘adheem an yashfiyak

“I ask Allah the Magnificent, Lord of the Magnificent Throne, to cure you.” (Recite 7 times when visiting someone who is ill)

📚 Abu Dawud 3106, Tirmidhi 2083 — Recite 7 times for the sick person

View Full Dua →

🏛️ Infographic

The 5 Pillars of Islamic Healing

Islam’s framework for health and recovery is multidimensional — addressing the whole person, not just the symptom.

🌿 A Holistic Model of Islamic Well-being

Each pillar is supported by Quranic evidence and authenticated Hadith

1
🤲
Dua & Dhikr

Supplication and remembrance of Allah — the primary spiritual cure

2
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Quranic Recitation

Reciting specific Surahs as ruqyah — Quran is explicitly called shifa

3
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Tibb al-Nabawi

Prophetic medicine — honey, black seed, hijama, and prophetic dietary guidance

4
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Medical Treatment

Seeking modern medicine — obligatory when life-saving, permitted always

5
🕌
Tawakkul & Sabr

Trust in Allah and patience during illness — itself a source of spiritual reward

This model draws from the works of Ibn al-Qayyim (Zad al-Ma’ad), Ibn Sina (Al-Qanun fi al-Tibb), and contemporary Islamic health scholars at IslamicMedicine.org.

🌾 Prophetic Medicine

Tibb al-Nabawi — The Prophet’s ﷺ Medicine

The Prophet Muhammad ﷺ recommended specific natural remedies backed by modern scientific research. These are not replacements for medical care but powerful Sunnah-aligned supplements.

🍯 Key Remedies from Prophetic Medicine

Authentic Hadith sources and modern evidence-based benefits

🍯
Honey (Asal)

Called a “healing for all illnesses” (Quran 16:69). Modern science confirms antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory properties.

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Black Seed (Habbatus Sawda)

“A remedy for every disease except death” (Bukhari 5688). Rich in thymoquinone — clinically studied for immunity.

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Olive Oil (Zayt)

Recommended for eating and anointing. High in oleocanthal — a natural anti-inflammatory compound.

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Zamzam Water

“The best water on earth” — regarded as a blessed drink with spiritual and physical healing properties.

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Hijama (Cupping)

“The best of your remedies is cupping” (Bukhari 5696). Now supported by WHO as complementary therapy.

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Fasting (Sawm)

“Fast and be healthy” (Ibn Sunni). Intermittent fasting is now validated by science for metabolic health.

For in-depth research, see the NIH study on Islamic prophetic medicine and IslamicMedicine.org.

“Make use of the two cures: honey and the Quran.”

— Attributed to Ibn Mas’ud رضي الله عنه | Ibn Majah 3452

🧠 Inner Peace

Mental Health, Anxiety & the Healing Soul

Islam recognized mental and emotional suffering 1,400 years before modern psychiatry. The Quran addresses grief, fear, and anxiety with profound guidance.

أَلَا بِذِكْرِ اللَّهِ تَطْمَئِنُّ الْقُلُوبُ

“Verily, in the remembrance of Allah do hearts find rest.”

— Surah Ar-Ra’d (13:28) — The Quranic prescription for anxiety

🤲

Dua for Anxiety & Distress

اللَّهُمَّ إِنِّي أَعُوذُ بِكَ مِنَ الْهَمِّ وَالْحَزَنِ

Allahumma inni a’udhu bika min al-hamm wal-hazan…

“O Allah, I seek refuge in You from worry and grief, weakness and laziness, cowardice and miserliness, and from being overwhelmed by debt and overpowered by men.”

📚 Sahih al-Bukhari 6369

Read Full Dua →
💙

Islam & Modern Mental Health

Scholars and Muslim mental health professionals increasingly affirm that seeking psychological counselling is permissible and encouraged in Islam. The Islamic Medical Association of North America (IMANA) provides guidelines on integrating Islamic values with evidence-based therapy.

The concept of nafs (soul/self) in Islamic psychology aligns closely with modern understanding of psychological well-being.

Step 1 — Acknowledge the Feeling

Islam validates emotional pain. The Prophet ﷺ himself wept, felt grief, and expressed distress — it is human and honourable to acknowledge suffering.

Step 2 — Turn to Allah in Dua

Make the specific dua for anxiety (above). Combine with recitation of Surah Al-Inshirah (94), which explicitly addresses the “expansion of the chest” — a metaphor for relief from burden.

Step 3 — Maintain Salah & Dhikr

The five daily prayers serve as natural anchors that prevent rumination and provide structure. Morning and evening dhikr (adhkar) are especially protective.

Step 4 — Seek Professional Help When Needed

Consult a Muslim counsellor or mental health professional. Resources like MuslimMentalHealth.com offer directories of Muslim-friendly therapists globally.

📝 Practical Guide

How to Make Dua for the Sick — Step by Step

Etiquette and method for making the most powerful supplication for healing — for yourself or someone you love.

1

Begin with Bismillah & Salawat

Start every supplication with “Bismillah” and send blessings upon the Prophet ﷺ. This is how dua “rises to the heavens without obstruction.”

2

Face the Qibla & Raise Your Hands

Face Makkah, raise both hands to chest level with palms open upward. This is the prophetically recommended posture for supplication.

3

Call Allah by His Beautiful Names

Address Allah as Al-Shafi (The Healer), Al-Rahman (The Most Merciful), or Al-Wadud (The Most Loving) — His names related to your need.

4

Recite the Authentic Healing Duas

Use the verified duas above — especially the ruqyah dua (Bukhari 5675) and the 7-times dua. Combine with personal supplication in your language.

5

Have Yaqeen (Certainty) in Allah’s Answer

The Prophet ﷺ said: “Call upon Allah while being certain of a response.” Doubt weakens dua. Trust completely in Allah’s mercy and wisdom.

✅ Best Times to Make Dua for Healing

  • Last third of the night (Tahajjud time) — Allah descends to the lowest heaven
  • After the obligatory prayers (Fard) — especially Fajr and Asr
  • Between Adhan and Iqamah — a window when dua is not rejected
  • On Fridays — especially the last hour before Maghrib
  • During prostration (Sujood) — “the closest a servant is to His Lord”
  • When fasting — especially at the time of breaking fast (Iftar)
  • During rainfall — a narrated time when duas are accepted
  • Laylat al-Qadr — the Night of Decree (last 10 nights of Ramadan)

🛡️ Quranic Healing

Ruqyah — Healing Through the Quran & Sunnah

Ruqyah is the Islamically sanctioned practice of reciting Quran and authentic supplications for protection and healing from illness, evil eye, and spiritual afflictions.

📖

Ruqyah Shariah

Legitimate Islamic ruqyah uses only Quran and authentic duas. It is free of innovation, charms, or unintelligible words. The Prophet ﷺ himself performed ruqyah.

Protection Duas →
🌙

The Three Quls

Al-Ikhlas (112), Al-Falaq (113), and Al-Nas (114) — collectively known as the “three quls.” Recite three times each morning and evening and before sleep for comprehensive protection.

Morning Adhkar →

Ayat al-Kursi

Quran 2:255 — the greatest verse in the Quran. Recited for protection from harm, evil eye (ayn), and spiritual illness. “Whoever recites it after every obligatory prayer, nothing will prevent them from entering Paradise.” (Nasa’i)

Quranic Duas →

“There is no harm in ruqyah as long as it does not involve shirk.”

— Prophet Muhammad ﷺ | Sahih Muslim 2200

Important Note: Ruqyah is a spiritual aid — it does not replace medical treatment. Scholars unanimously agree that combining ruqyah with medical care is the most complete approach. For verified ruqyah guidance, refer to authenticated sources like IslamQA on Ruqyah and Sheikh Ibn Baz’s fatwas on the official Ibn Baz website.

Explore Our Full Health & Healing Dua Collection

Browse 25+ authenticated duas for illness, pain, mental distress, and visiting the sick — all with Arabic text, transliteration, and hadith sources.

❓ Frequently Asked

Common Questions About Islamic Healing

Answers to the most searched questions about health, healing, and dua in Islam.

What is the most powerful dua for healing in Islam?
The most cited healing dua in authentic sources is: “Allahumma Rabb al-naas, adh-hib al-ba’s, ishfi anta al-shaafi, la shifaa’a illa shifaa’uka, shifaa’an la yughadiru saqama” — recorded in both Sahih al-Bukhari (5675) and Sahih Muslim (2191). It should be recited 7 times while placing the right hand on the area of pain or on the sick person. Additionally, Al-Fatiha as ruqyah and the dua of Prophet Ayyub (21:83) are among the most powerful supplications for healing.
Is seeking medical treatment compulsory in Islam?
Yes, according to the majority of Islamic scholars, seeking medical treatment is wajib (obligatory) when not doing so would lead to serious harm or death. This is based on the principle of hifz al-nafs (preservation of life) — one of the five higher objectives of Islamic law (Maqasid al-Shariah). In other cases it is at minimum mustahabb (recommended). The Prophet ﷺ said: “Seek treatment, for Allah has not created a disease without creating a cure for it” (Abu Dawud 3855). Dua and medicine are to be used together — not as alternatives to each other.
What does Islam say about illness being a punishment?
Islam explicitly teaches that illness is NOT necessarily a punishment. In many hadiths, illness is described as an expiation for sins and a means of elevation in spiritual rank. The Prophet ﷺ said: “No fatigue, nor disease, nor sorrow, nor sadness, nor hurt, nor distress befalls a Muslim, even if it were the prick he receives from a thorn, but that Allah expiates some of his sins for that” (Bukhari 5641). Illness can be a test, a purification, or even a mercy — the believer’s response (patience and gratitude) determines the spiritual outcome.
How many times should I recite the healing dua?
The prophetic guidance specifies 7 repetitions for several healing duas — especially “As’alu-llah al-‘adheem…” (Abu Dawud 3106) and the ruqyah dua (Bukhari 5675). The number 7 holds significance in Islamic practice (7 heavens, 7 tawaf circuits, etc.). Some scholars permit reciting more if needed, as the basis is sincerity rather than a rigid formula. For the three quls (Al-Ikhlas, Al-Falaq, Al-Nas) before sleep, 3 repetitions are authenticated. The key is consistency, sincerity, and certainty in Allah’s response.
Can I make dua for a non-Muslim who is sick?
Yes — the majority of scholars permit making dua for a non-Muslim’s physical recovery and well-being in this life. This is an act of compassion (rahmah) and does not contradict Islamic teachings. What is not permitted is asking for their forgiveness in the afterlife if they die in a state of disbelief (Quran 9:113). The Prophet ﷺ showed immense compassion toward non-Muslims during illness and prayed for their well-being. Making dua for a sick non-Muslim neighbour or colleague is an act of good character (husn al-khulq).

May Allah Grant You Complete Shifa 🤲

Explore DuaForAll’s full collection of authenticated health and healing duas — with Arabic text, transliteration, and Hadith sources for every supplication.

اللَّهُمَّ اشْفِ مَرْضَانَا وَمَرْضَى الْمُسْلِمِينَ · O Allah, heal our sick and the sick of all Muslims