How to Thank Allah
The Supplication That Praises Everything He Owns — Then Asks for Everything You Need
Allahumma-ghfir li jami'a ma mada min dhunubi, wa-'simni fima baqiya min 'umuri, wa-rzuqni 'amalan zakiyan tarda bihi 'anni.
O Allah, forgive me all my past sins. Protect me for the rest of my life. And grant me pure deeds with which You will be satisfied with me."
This dua is structured as two complete halves that most people treat as one undifferentiated supplication. The first half is pure praise — the second half is three requests. The structure is deliberate and theologically precise: you praise Allah for owning everything first, then ask from the One you have just established owns everything. Gratitude precedes request. Acknowledgment of Allah's total ownership makes the asking that follows both humble and appropriate. This is the correct Islamic architecture of dua — and this supplication demonstrates it perfectly.

How do you thank Allah? Not with a casual "Alhamdulillah" said out of habit — though that phrase, said sincerely, is profound. But with something that actually matches the scale of what is being acknowledged. All praise. All sovereignty. All good. All matter — visible and hidden. Returning to Him. Him being worthy of that praise not because we decided He is, but because of who He actually is.
And then — after you have stood in that acknowledgment — you ask. For everything you have done wrong. For the rest of the life you have left. For deeds so pure that He is satisfied with you. That is how you thank Allah. This is that dua.
🤲 The Complete Dua for Thanking Allah
🏗️ The Two-Part Architecture
Understanding the structure unlocks this dua. Part One is not an introduction to the requests — it is the substance of gratitude itself. Part Two is not the main event — it is the natural conclusion of what Part One has established.
Part 1 — The Six "Kulluhu" Declarations
Part 2 — Three Requests Covering All of Time
🔍 Word-by-Word Breakdown
"Kulluhu" — all of it, every part of it, without exception. "Laka al-hamdu kulluhu" — not some praise, not the highest praise, not my praise alone. All praise. Every expression of gratitude that exists anywhere, from any creature toward any goodness — it ultimately belongs to Allah, because all goodness originates from Him. "Laka al-mulku kulluhu" — no ruler truly owns their kingdom. No parent truly owns their children. No person truly owns their own body. Real, ultimate sovereignty belongs entirely to Allah. "Biyadika al-khayru kulluhu" — not "from You" but "in Your hand" — actively held, actively dispensed at every moment.
📌 "Kulluhu" is not rhetorical — it is precise: The repetition of "kulluhu" (all of it) is intentional training. Each time, the heart is asked to expand its acknowledgment to the complete "all" rather than a selective portion. Not some praise, some sovereignty, some good — all. This is what separates this dua from a casual "Alhamdulillah." The totality is the point.
"Yarji'u" — returns, comes back. Every affair — political, personal, cosmic — ultimately returns to Allah. "'Alaniyah" — the open, the public, the visible. "Sirr" — the secret, the hidden, the private. Together these cover the complete totality of reality: what is manifest and what is concealed. There is no matter that has a dimension Allah does not see. No public affair outside His knowledge. No private thought outside His awareness. All of it — returns to Him.
"Fa" — therefore, because of all that has just been said. "Ahlun" — worthy, deserving, the rightful recipient. "An tuhmad" — to receive hamd, to be praised. The dua draws the conclusion: given all praise, sovereignty, good, and all matter belonging to You — yes, You are worthy of being praised. "Innaka 'ala kulli shay'in qadir" — You are capable of all things. This closes Part One and bridges to Part Two: the One being asked can grant anything.
"Jami'a" — all of, the entirety of. "Ma mada" — what has passed, what is behind me. "Min dhunubi" — of my sins. Not "some sins" or "the major ones" or "the ones I remember." All of them — from the beginning of one's life to this moment, the known and the unknown, the remembered and the forgotten, the small and the large. The "kulluhu" of Part One matches the "jami'a" of this request: the One who has all good and mercy has enough to cover all sins.
"'Isma" — protection, preservation, guarding from falling into sin. The same root as the word for prophetic infallibility — divine protection from error. "Fima baqiya min 'umuri" — in what remains of my life, however much that is. An hour or fifty years — the request covers all of it. This is asking Allah to guard you from yourself, from temptation, from circumstances that lead to falling.
📌 Past and future — both covered: "Forgive all my past sins" addresses everything behind you. "Protect me for all my remaining life" addresses everything ahead. Together they span the complete temporal dimension of a human life — leaving no time uncovered.
"Arzuqni" — grant me as rizq, provide me. "'Amalan zakiyan" — a deed that is pure, growing, blessed, free from corruption. "Zaka" means to be pure, to grow, to be blessed and flourishing. A zaki deed is done with pure intention, correctly performed, and producing ongoing good. "Tarda bihi 'anni" — with which You are satisfied with me. Not deeds that appear good. Not deeds others admire. Deeds that cause Allah to be satisfied with the person who did them.
📌 The ultimate standard — Allah's satisfaction: The Quran says: "Allah is pleased with them and they are pleased with Him." (Surah Al-Bayyinah 98:8). This is the description of the people of Paradise. "Tarda bihi 'anni" is asking for the deeds that produce that mutual pleasure. Not just good deeds — deeds that earn Allah's satisfaction with you. This is the aspirational ceiling of Islamic gratitude through action.
🌿 The Three Dimensions of Islamic Gratitude (Shukr)
You cannot count what Allah has given you. Not the breaths, not the heartbeats, not the invisible systems maintaining you alive at every moment. Given that reality — how do you thank Allah adequately? Islamic scholars teach that true shukr has three inseparable dimensions — and this dua covers all three.
The final request in this dua — "grant me pure deeds with which You will be satisfied with me" — is specifically asking for shukr with the limbs: the highest, most complete form of gratitude. When you make this dua, you are asking Allah to make your entire life an act of thanks.
🕌 When to Recite This Dua
When Something Good Happens
When a blessing arrives — a recovery, a success, a provision, a relief — this is how you thank Allah with the full weight of what He deserves. Not just a quick Alhamdulillah, but the complete acknowledgment of His ownership of all things.
After Every Obligatory Prayer
Five times a day, stand before Allah and acknowledge that all praise, sovereignty, and good is His — then ask for forgiveness, protection, and pure deeds. Make it part of your post-prayer dhikr.
When You Feel Overwhelmed by What You Have Been Given
Sometimes gratitude feels too large to express. This dua is built for that. "All praise — kulluhu." When you do not know how to say thank you adequately, let the "kulluhu" carry the weight.
At the End of a Good Day
When a day has been peaceful, productive, and blessed — close it by acknowledging the source of that goodness. Recite this dua before sleeping as a specific act of gratitude for the day that passed.
After Being Saved from a Difficulty
When something bad that could have happened did not — illness that passed, an accident avoided, a crisis resolved — this dua correctly acknowledges who orchestrated that outcome: "biyadika al-khayru kulluhu."
When You Want to Return to Allah After Falling Short
The second half covers past, future, and deeds — making this appropriate not only for gratitude but for sincere tawbah. Gratitude and repentance arrive together: recognizing Allah's gifts and recognizing how far short you fell of deserving them.
📿 How to Make This Dua Properly
Say Part One as genuine acknowledgment — not as an opening
When you say "laka al-hamdu kulluhu" — pause and mean it. Think of one thing you are grateful for right now. Feel the acknowledgment that it came from Him. This is not a quick opener to get to the requests. It is the substance of the dua — the actual act of thanking Allah.
Say "kulluhu" with the weight of "all" each time it appears
Every phrase in Part One ends with "kulluhu" (all of it) or equivalent completeness. Let "all" be felt each time. Not some praise — all. Not some sovereignty — all. Not some good — all. The totality is the point, and saying it carelessly reduces the dua to noise.
Let "fa-ahlun an tuhmad" be a conclusion you arrive at
"So You are worthy of being praised." After all six declarations, let this land as a genuine arrival — not a formula. You have just acknowledged who He is. The conclusion follows naturally. Say it as the conclusion it is.
Ask for "jami'a" (all) past sins with the confidence of "kulluhu" behind you
The One in whose hand is all good has all the mercy needed to cover all the sins. The scale of the Owner matches the scale of what you need. When you ask for forgiveness of all sins — ask with the confidence that comes from Part One.
Recite "zakiyan tarda bihi 'anni" with genuine longing — not as a closing formula
When you ask for pure deeds that earn Allah's satisfaction — bring to mind the difference between a deed praised by people and a deed that pleases Allah. Ask specifically for the latter. With genuine longing for your deeds to be of the kind that earn His satisfaction with you.
✨ 6 Benefits of This Dua for Thanking Allah
By declaring that all praise, sovereignty, good, and matter belong to Allah, this dua corrects the heart's tendency to attribute blessings to circumstances, luck, or personal effort. True gratitude begins with correct attribution — and this dua makes it explicit and complete.
All past sins forgiven, all remaining life protected, present and future filled with pure deeds. There is no part of a life's timeline that this dua does not address. Past, future, and deeds — complete.
"Tarda bihi 'anni" — with which You will be satisfied with me. Not deeds that meet a minimum standard — deeds that earn Allah's pleasure. The standard of gratitude through action is set at the highest possible level.
The dua moves from thanking Allah to asking for forgiveness. In Islam these are not separate acts — recognizing how much you have been given and recognizing how short you fell of deserving it are the same movement. Gratitude and tawbah arrive together.
"Kulluhu" appears multiple times in Part One. Each repetition trains the heart to expand its acknowledgment to the complete "all" rather than a selective portion. Daily recitation builds the habit of comprehensive gratitude.
Praise Allah comprehensively before presenting your needs. The One who owns everything is the One to ask from — but ask after acknowledging the ownership. This dua demonstrates the correct Islamic dua structure in perfect form.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Kulluhu — All of It — Is the Only Scale That Matches
How do you thank Allah when you cannot enumerate what He has given you? You acknowledge what is true: that all praise belongs to Him. All sovereignty. All good — from His hand. All matter, open and secret — nothing happens outside His knowledge and decree.
And then — from that acknowledgment of totality — you say: Forgive everything I have done wrong. All of it. Guard me for whatever time remains. And give me deeds that are so pure, so genuinely good, that You are satisfied with me when You see them.
Make this dua when you are grateful. Make it when you are aware of how much you have been given and do not know how to say thank you adequately. Make it when you want to return. Because "kulluhu" — all of it — is the only scale of gratitude that actually matches who you are thanking.
May Allah receive our hamd and our shukr. May He forgive all our past sins, protect us for all our remaining days, and grant us pure deeds with which He is satisfied with us.
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