Sila Guide

A period tracking app for Muslim women needs fiqh-aware guidance built into the record.

The right app should do more than show a predicted start date. It should help Muslim women log bleeding, keep worship status visible, and reduce the mental load around recurring fiqh questions.

Why women search this

  • Made for Muslim women rather than retrofitted later
  • Keeps worship implications visible
  • Supports practical, private monthly use

What to look for

A practical answer for women trying to make a worship decision, not just compare features.

A period tracking app for Muslim women should not force users to manage their religious questions in a separate notebook, browser tab, or memory system. The best version keeps the cycle record and the worship implications together.

That matters because women are often not just asking when their next period is due. They are asking whether a bleeding pattern affects prayer, fasting, ghusl, or future Ramadan make-up planning.

What a Muslim-focused period app should include

If an app misses these pieces, it still leaves women doing the most important work outside the product.

Worship visibility

The record should make prayer and fasting implications easy to follow instead of leaving them disconnected from the bleeding log.

Madhab-aware logic

A Muslim-focused tracker should reflect the rulings a woman actually follows instead of flattening all cases into one generic interpretation.

Ramadan follow-through

Missed fasts should stay visible so the app supports qada planning instead of leaving that debt to memory alone.

Why Sila is designed this way

Sila is being built around a narrow user problem: helping Muslim women keep cycle tracking and worship clarity in the same place.

User lens

The product starts from recurring monthly questions, not from generic wellness logging.

Religious workflow

We treat logging, prayer status, and Ramadan follow-up as one workflow because that is how the problem shows up in real life.

Scope

The app is a practical tracking tool, not a substitute for scholar guidance in unusual cases.

Common questions about period apps for Muslim women

Questions women often still have after reading the short answer.

Because a generic app usually stops at cycle data. Muslim women often need the record to stay connected to hayd and istihadha questions, prayer status, ghusl decisions, and Ramadan make-up fasts.

Sila is being designed specifically around Muslim women who need fiqh-aware tracking. The goal is not to add Islamic language to a generic tracker, but to build the workflow around the religious questions from the start.

Yes. Simplicity matters more here, not less. The right app should reduce mental overhead by keeping the practical answers close to the data you already log.

If you want this handled inside the product

Move from reading about the problem to a tool designed around it.

Use a period app built for Muslim women

Join the waitlist for Sila if you want a period tracking app for Muslim women that keeps cycle history, worship status, and Ramadan follow-up in one product.