Dua Before Sleeping | The Prophet's ﷺ Nightly Praise and Prayer for Salvation | PureDua
📿 Duas & Dhikr

Dua Before Sleeping

The Prophet's ﷺ Three Praises and the One Request That Follows Them

⚡ Quick Answer — The Prophet's ﷺ Bedtime Dua · Sunan Abu Dawood
Sufficiency & Shelter
الحمدُ لله الذي كفَاني وآواني
Food & Drink
الحمدُ لله الذي أطعمَني وسقاني
Grace & Abundance
الحمدُ لله الذي منَّ عليَّ وأفضلَ
🔥 Then — The One Request · For the Hereafter اللهمَّ إني أسألُك بعزَّتِك أن تُنَجِّيَني من النار
"O Allah, I ask You by Your glory to save me from the Fire."
— Narrated in Sunan Abu Dawood · From the Prophet's ﷺ practice when going to his sleeping place
📌 Information Gain — What Most Articles Miss

This bedtime dua has a structure found nowhere else in the prophetic sleeping supplications: three consecutive "Alhamdulillah" statements — each praising Allah for a specific gift received that day — followed by a single request. The Prophet ﷺ did not say "Alhamdulillah for everything." He named: sufficiency and shelter. Food and drink. Grace and abundance. Three named categories — all received in the day just ending. Only after praising for what was received does he ask for what comes next: "By Your glory, save me from the Fire." End each day naming what you received. Then ask for what you need from the next world.

🎧 Listen — Dua Before Sleeping recited by Oualid El Makami
Dua Before Sleeping recited by Oualid El Makami — PureDua
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Before he closed his eyes, the Prophet ﷺ named what the day had given him — specifically. Sufficiency. Shelter. Food. Drink. Grace. Abundance. Three times "Alhamdulillah" — each one attached to something real that had arrived in the day that was ending. And then — only after the naming — one request. Not for a good day tomorrow. For what matters most: "By Your glory, save me from the Fire."

🤲 The Complete Dua Before Sleeping

✦ Three Praises Backward · One Request Forward · Sunan Abu Dawood
الحمدُ لله الذي كفَاني وآواني ۝ الحمدُ لله الذي أطعمَني وسقاني ۝ الحمدُ لله الذي منَّ عليَّ وأفضلَ ۝ اللهمَّ إني أسألُك بعزَّتِك أن تُنَجِّيَني من النار
Alhamdulillahi-lladhi kafani wa awani · Alhamdulillahi-lladhi at'amani wa saqani · Alhamdulillahi-lladhi manna 'alayya wa afdal · Allahumma inni as'aluka bi'izzatika an tunajjiyani min al-nar
"Praise be to Allah Who has given me sufficiency and has given me shelter. Praise be to Allah Who has fed me and given me drink. Praise be to Allah Who has been gracious to me and given to me most lavishly. O Allah, I ask You by Your glory to save me from the Fire."
— Sunan Abu Dawood · From the Prophet's ﷺ practice when going to his sleeping place

The Structure — Praises Look Back, the Request Looks Forward

Sufficiency and Shelter

"Kafani wa awani" — what the day gave: enough, and a place to be. The two most fundamental human needs — named first.

كفَاني وآواني
↓ looking back at the day just ended ↓
Food and Drink

"At'amani wa saqani" — what the day gave: nourishment and hydration. The two non-negotiable physical requirements — explicitly named.

أطعمَني وسقاني
↓ looking back at the day just ended ↓
Grace and Abundance

"Manna 'alayya wa afdal" — what the day gave: not just the necessary but more — graciously and lavishly given.

منَّ عليَّ وأفضلَ
↓ now looking forward → to the Hereafter ↓
🔥
Save Me from the Fire — The Only Specific Request

"Bi'izzatika an tunajjiyani min al-nar" — what the next world requires: complete eternal salvation. Three worldly praises. One eternal request.

أن تُنَجِّيَني من النار

📌 Why praise comes before the request — every time: The Prophet ﷺ could have simply asked "save me from the Fire" before sleeping. Instead he opened with three specific praises. This is the Islamic model: acknowledge what has been given before asking for what is needed. The person who counts their blessings before asking approaches Allah from genuine awareness — they know who has been giving all along.

🔍 Key Phrases Explained

Praise 2 — The Most Taken for Granted
أطعمَني · وسقاني
At'amani · wa saqani
Fed AND Given Drink — The Most Basic as the Most Profound ✦

"At'amani" — He fed me. The specific, physical act of receiving nourishment. "Saqani" — He gave me drink. Food and water — the two non-negotiable requirements of human life, provided every single day without exception. Most people take them so entirely for granted that they do not consciously notice receiving them. The Prophet ﷺ paused before sleeping and named them. The most basic things become the most profound acknowledgments when consciously named every night. This is the foundation of Islamic gratitude: seeing what is always there.

Praise 3 — Beyond the Minimum
منَّ عليَّ · وأفضلَ
Manna 'alayya · wa afdal
Grace AND Lavish Giving — Not Just the Necessary But More

"Manna 'alayya" — He was gracious to me, He bestowed His favor freely. "Mann" is grace given from a position of strength and generosity — from abundance, not obligation. "Wa afdal" — to give more than what is needed, to be generous beyond what is required. Together: the gracious quality of what was given (mann) and the generous quantity (fadal). After "enough" and "shelter" and "food and drink" — and it was also gracious, and it was also lavish. The third praise elevates gratitude from acknowledging necessity to acknowledging abundance.

The One Request — By His Invincible Glory
بِعِزَّتِكَ · أن تُنَجِّيَني مِن النار
Bi'izzatika · an tunajjiyani min al-nar
By Your Glory — Save Me Completely from the Fire ✦

"Bi'izzatika" — by Your invincible glory and complete honor. "'Izzah" is Allah's attribute of being completely undefeatable, completely honored, beyond any diminishment. Asking "by Your glory" is tawassul through Allah's own attribute — the attribute of invincible power is chosen because the One asked to save from the Fire has the 'izzah to do so without any constraint whatsoever. "Tunajjiyani" — save me completely, rescue me, deliver me entirely. "Min al-nar" — from the Fire. Not partial protection. Complete salvation. And this is the only specific request in the entire dua — after three worldly praises, one eternal ask.

📌 Three worldly praises. One eternal request. The Prophet ﷺ's priorities are made explicit by the structure itself. He acknowledged what this world gave. And he asked for what this world cannot give — eternal salvation from the Fire. Both, in correct proportion, every night.

🌿 The Three Dimensions of Islamic Gratitude

Islamic gratitude (shukr) has three inseparable dimensions — and this bedtime dua covers the tongue's naming every night by design:

❤️
الْقَلْب
Heart

Genuinely recognizing that these gifts came from Allah — not from effort, not from circumstance. From Him alone.

🗣️
اللِّسَان
Tongue ✦

Naming them specifically. "Alhamdulillah for kafani wa awani." Saying the specific things — what this dua does every night.

🙌
الْجَوَارِح
Limbs

Using the gifts in ways that please Allah — the body fed and sheltered being used for worship and service.

🕌 When and How to Make This Dua

🌙

When Going to Bed — Every Night

When you are lying down, when the day is ending, before sleep takes over. Make these words the last conscious verbal act before closing your eyes — as the Prophet ﷺ practiced.

🎯

Say the Three Alhamdulillahs Slowly and Specifically

"Kafani wa awani" — think of today's sufficiency and shelter. "At'amani wa saqani" — recall the food and water. "Manna 'alayya wa afdal" — notice something today that was more than strictly needed. Let the praise be specific.

👑

Say "Bi'izzatika" with Awareness of What 'Izzah Means

When you say "by Your glory" — let that invincible power be felt. Nothing constrains Allah's 'izzah. By that 'izzah — He can save. The 'izzah invoked is real and adequate for the task.

📿

Combine with "Aslamtu Nafsi Ilayk"

Pair this dua with the surrender dua: surrender yourself to Allah → praise Him for the day's gifts → ask for eternal salvation. Together they form the complete prophetic bedtime practice.

😔

Even on Hard Days — These Gifts Were Still Given

"Kafani wa awani" and "at'amani wa saqani" are always true. The Prophet ﷺ made this dua every night regardless of how the day was. On the hardest days, naming these gifts is an act of spiritual discipline — and the most needed one.

📵

Let It Genuinely Be the Last Thing — Before Sleep

Not before checking messages one more time. Not before running through tomorrow's list. The Prophet ﷺ "used to say when he went to his sleeping place" — the closing act, not a preamble to other things.

✨ 5 Benefits of This Bedtime Dua

Benefit 1
🙏
Closes Every Day with Specific, Named Gratitude

Three "Alhamdulillah" statements with specific blessings attached. Not vague gratitude — the naming of real things received. The Islamic practice of closing each day with conscious acknowledgment of what was given, as the Prophet ﷺ practiced every night.

Benefit 2
🍞
Reframes the Most Basic Blessings as the Most Profound

Sufficiency. Shelter. Food. Drink. The things taken most for granted become the most explicitly praised. Naming them every night rebuilds the habit of seeing them as gifts — reversing the forgetfulness that makes blessing invisible.

Benefit 3
🔥
The Last Request Is for Eternal Salvation

After three worldly praises, the single request is for salvation from the Fire. The last thing the tongue asks for before sleep is the most important outcome of the entire life. The correct Islamic priority at the most honest moment of each day.

Benefit 4
👑
"Bi'izzatika" — Asking by Allah's Glory Is the Most Powerful Tawassul

Asking through Allah's own attribute of 'izzah (invincible glory) is asking through the most reliable basis — His own perfection. The One with complete 'izzah can save completely from the Fire without any constraint.

Benefit 5
⚖️
Models the Complete Islamic Orientation — Dunya and Akhirah in Correct Proportion

Worldly gifts received with gratitude (not attached to, not ignored), and the akhirah's need actively requested (not neglected). Grateful for this world, focused on the next — produced every night by this dua's structure.

🌙
Works Even on the Hardest Days

"Kafani wa awani" and "at'amani wa saqani" are present even in a difficult day. The Prophet ﷺ made this dua every night regardless. The practice is not about the day being objectively good — it is about recognizing what was always there.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Q
What is the dua the Prophet ﷺ said when going to bed?
The Prophet ﷺ used to say: "Alhamdulillahi-lladhi kafani wa awani, Alhamdulillahi-lladhi at'amani wa saqani, Alhamdulillahi-lladhi manna 'alayya wa afdal, Allahumma inni as'aluka bi'izzatika an tunajjiyani min al-nar" — Praise be to Allah Who gave me sufficiency and shelter, Who fed me and gave me drink, Who was gracious to me and gave lavishly. O Allah, by Your glory, save me from the Fire. (Sunan Abu Dawood)
Q
Why does this dua have three "Alhamdulillah" statements before the request?
Because Islamic dua begins with acknowledgment of what has been given before asking for what is needed. The Prophet ﷺ specifically named three categories — sufficiency and shelter, food and drink, grace and abundance — before his request. This models the correct Islamic relationship with blessings: see them, name them, praise Allah for them, and ask from that position of genuine acknowledged gratitude.
Q
What does "bi'izzatika" mean?
"'Izzah" means invincible glory, complete power, undefeatable might. Asking "bi'izzatika" is tawassul through Allah's own attribute — invoking His absolute power as the basis of the request. The attribute of 'izzah is chosen because the One asked to save from the Fire has the invincible power to do so without any constraint. "By Your invincible glory — save me."
Q
What does "tunajjiyani min al-nar" mean?
"Tunajjiyani" means save me, rescue me, deliver me completely. "Min al-nar" — from the Fire, from Hell. Complete salvation — not a lighter experience of it, not protection within it. This is the only specific request this dua makes, and it is for the most important outcome possible.
Q
Is this the same as the other bedtime dua "aslamtu nafsi ilayk"?
No — two different prophetic bedtime supplications. "Aslamtu nafsi ilayk" focuses on complete surrender to Allah, tawakkul, and declaration of faith. This dua focuses on gratitude for the day's specific blessings before asking for salvation. Both are authentically narrated. They complement each other — say both.
Q
Can I say this dua even if my day was not good?
Yes. "Kafani wa awani" and "at'amani wa saqani" are true even on a difficult day. The Prophet ﷺ made this dua every night regardless of how the day was. The practice is not about the day being objectively good — it is about recognizing the minimum gifts that were always there, even on the hardest days.

Name What Was Given. Then Ask for What Matters Most.

When he lay down to sleep, the Prophet ﷺ did not leave the day behind without acknowledgment. He paused. He named what he had been given — specifically. Three times "Alhamdulillah."

And then — from the position of someone who had been given much — one request. Not for tomorrow. For eternity.

Make this dua every night. Slowly. Name the sufficiency. Name the shelter. Name the food. Name the drink. Name the grace. Name the abundance. Because the One who provided all of what you just praised can provide what you are about to ask for.

الحمدُ لله الذي كفَاني وآواني الحمدُ لله الذي أطعمَني وسقاني الحمدُ لله الذي منَّ عليَّ وأفضلَ
اللهمَّ إني أسألُك بعزَّتِكَ أن تُنَجِّيَني من النار

May Allah receive our gratitude for the sufficiency, shelter, food, drink, grace, and abundance He gives us every day. And may He — by His 'izzah — save us from the Fire.

آمِين يَا رَبَّ الْعَالَمِين
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