Answer first
A Ramadan hifz plan should be modest, consistent, and tied to specific times of day — Fajr for new material, post-Asr for review, post-Taraweeh for listening. Most memorizers benefit from 1–2 new ayat per day with aggressive review of existing material, not a rush to finish new Juz.
A realistic day
- Sehri (pre-Fajr): One new ayah, slow, deliberate. 10 min.
- After Fajr: Review yesterday’s new ayah. 5 min.
- Dhuha: Passive listening to your current surah. Optional.
- After Asr: Full review queue. 15 min.
- After Taraweeh: Listen to tomorrow’s ayat. Don’t memorize. Just absorb. 5 min.
Why this works
- Your willpower is highest before eating. Use it for new material.
- Your body has reserves post-Asr; review is easier than new.
- Taraweeh already exposes you to the Quran — let it do its work without pressure.
What to skip
- Heroic new-Juz pacing that burns you out by day 15.
- Pulling all-nighters to memorize in the last 10 nights.
- Competing with others’ Ramadan plans.
The last 10 nights
Pivot to revision, not new material. These nights are for ibaadah — don’t turn them into a hifz marathon.