Image 1 — I built a prayer app designed for phones, tablets, foldables, iPad, and Mac
Image 2 — I built a prayer app designed for phones, tablets, foldables, iPad, and Mac
Image 3 — I built a prayer app designed for phones, tablets, foldables, iPad, and Mac
Image 4 — I built a prayer app designed for phones, tablets, foldables, iPad, and Mac
Image 5 — I built a prayer app designed for phones, tablets, foldables, iPad, and Mac
Image 6 — I built a prayer app designed for phones, tablets, foldables, iPad, and Mac
Image 7 — I built a prayer app designed for phones, tablets, foldables, iPad, and Mac

I built a prayer app designed for phones, tablets, foldables, iPad, and Mac

I built Azimuth, a native, privacy first prayer app for Android, iPhone, iPad, and Mac.

Prayer times are calculated on your device, the app doesn’t collect personally identifiable data, and it only requests the permissions it needs.

Built with Kotlin + Jetpack Compose on Android and Swift 6 + SwiftUI on Apple platforms, Azimuth includes prayer reminders, a Fajr alarm, widgets, a Qibla compass, rakat guides, multiple calculation methods, madhabs, and high latitude support.

There’s no subscription. You get a 14 day free trial, then it’s a one time purchase if you decide to keep it.

I’d really appreciate any feedback. If you enjoy it, a rating or lifetime purchase helps support future development.

Android: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.mirroredabstraction.android.azimuthcompass

Apple: https://apps.apple.com/ca/app/azimuth-prayer-times-qibla/id6781444202

u/mirroredabstractiond — 2 days ago
▲ 3 r/muslimtechnet+1 crossposts

I built a native, offline-first prayer app for Android and Apple platforms

There are already a lot of prayer apps, but most seem to prioritize subscriptions, ads, or adding more features instead of getting the core experience right. I wanted something that was simple, reliable, and respected your privacy, so I built Azimuth.

Everything works completely offline. Prayer times are calculated on your device, the app doesn’t collect any personally identifiable data, and it only asks for the permissions it actually needs.

I built separate native apps for each platform using Kotlin + Jetpack Compose on Android and Swift 6 + SwiftUI on Apple platforms. That made it possible to build proper adaptive layouts for phones, foldables, tablets, iPad, and Mac instead of stretching a phone UI onto larger screens.

To get the most out of it, I recommend enabling prayer reminders, the Fajr alarm if you need it, and adding the widgets. Android also has a persistent prayer notification, while iPhone and iPad support Lock Screen widgets, so your next prayer is always just a glance away without opening the app.

The Fajr alarm works as a true alarm on Android and on iOS 26+ using Apple’s AlarmKit. On earlier iOS versions it falls back to a notification because AlarmKit isn’t available there.

You also get a Qibla and general compass, rakat guides, multiple calculation methods, madhabs, and high latitude support.

There’s no subscription. You get a 14 day free trial, then it’s a one time purchase if you decide to keep it.
If you check it out, I’d really appreciate any feedback. And if you end up liking it, a rating or the lifetime purchase helps support future development.

Android: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.mirroredabstraction.android.azimuthcompass

iOS/iPad/MacOS: https://apps.apple.com/ca/app/azimuth-prayer-times-qibla/id6781444202

u/mirroredabstractiond — 2 days ago