1. The Islamic Foundation — Why This Guide Exists
Islam is the only major world religion with an explicit, positive, detailed theology of marital intimacy. This is not accidental — it reflects the Islamic view that the body, desire, and marriage are all part of Allah's design and worthy of education, not shame.
وَمِنْ آيَاتِهِ أَنْ خَلَقَ لَكُم مِّنْ أَنفُسِكُمْ أَزْوَاجًا لِّتَسْكُنُوا إِلَيْهَا وَجَعَلَ بَيْنَكُم مَّوَدَّةً وَرَحْمَةً ۚ إِنَّ فِي ذَٰلِكَ لَآيَاتٍ لِّقَوْمٍ يَتَفَكَّرُونَ
"And among His signs is that He created for you from yourselves mates that you may find tranquillity in them; and He placed between you affection and mercy. Indeed in that are signs for a people who reflect."
— Ar-Rum 30:21
Three words in this verse tell us everything about the Islamic model of marital intimacy:
- Sakan (tranquillity): Intimate life within marriage should produce peace, safety, and rest — not anxiety, shame, or pain. If intimacy produces these negative outcomes, something is wrong and should be addressed.
- Mawaddah (active affection): The word used is not just "love" but a love that is expressed — active, warm, expressed through actions, words, and physical presence. Intimacy is part of mawaddah.
- Rahmah (mercy and tenderness): Every act of intimacy between husband and wife should be conducted with mercy — consideration for the other's comfort, wellbeing, and needs. Not just one partner's desires.
"In the sexual act of each of you there is sadaqah (charity)." The Companions asked: "When one of us fulfils his desire, will he have a reward for that?" He said: "If he had done it in a forbidden way, would he not have been punished? So in the same way, if he does it in a lawful way, he will have a reward."
— Prophet Muhammad ﷺ, Sahih Muslim 1006
Sex within nikah is not merely permissible — it is an act of worship. This guide is written to help you fulfil that worship in the most complete, safe, knowledgeable, and Islamically grounded way possible.
2. Before Intimacy — The Sunnah Preparation
The Prophet ﷺ established specific practices before intimate encounters. These are not optional extras — they are part of the Sunnah of marital intimacy, and they transform a physical act into an integrated spiritual and physical experience.
01
The Opening Du'a — Bismillah
بِسْمِ اللَّهِ، اللَّهُمَّ جَنِّبْنَا الشَّيْطَانَ، وَجَنِّبِ الشَّيْطَانَ مَا رَزَقْتَنَا
"In the name of Allah. O Allah, keep the Shaytan away from us and keep the Shaytan away from what You have blessed us with."
— Bukhari 3271, Muslim 1434 — Recite before beginning intimacy
The Prophet ﷺ said: "If one of you, when approaching his wife, says: Bismillah, Allahumma jannibnash-shaytan wa jannibish-shaytan ma razaqtana — and if a child is decreed for them, the Shaytan will never harm that child." (Bukhari, Muslim). This du'a does three things: it begins the act in Allah's name, it seeks Allah's protection, and it transforms a physical act into an act of remembrance (dhikr).
02
The Du'a for Meeting One's Spouse
اللَّهُمَّ إِنِّي أَسْأَلُكَ مِنْ خَيْرِهَا وَخَيْرِ مَا جَبَلْتَهَا عَلَيْهِ، وَأَعُوذُ بِكَ مِنْ شَرِّهَا وَشَرِّ مَا جَبَلْتَهَا عَلَيْهِ
"O Allah, I ask You for the goodness in her and the good character You have created in her. And I seek refuge in You from her evil and the evil character You have created in her."
— Abu Dawud 2160 (Sahih) — Recited by the husband when first meeting his wife (especially applicable on the wedding night and as a regular du'a of appreciation)
03
Cleanliness and Preparation (Fitrah)
The acts of fitrah (natural cleanliness) that Islam prescribes are directly related to intimate health:
- Trimming pubic hair: The Prophet ﷺ placed a maximum of 40 days between trimmings. This is both a hygiene requirement and a Sunnah. Regular trimming reduces bacterial accumulation and maintains cleanliness.
- Trimming underarm hair: Same ruling — reduces odour and bacterial growth, which directly affects intimate experience.
- Dental hygiene (siwak/miswak): The Prophet ﷺ recommended siwak before approaching his wife. Fresh breath is a basic courtesy to your spouse.
- Wudu before sleep: The Prophet ﷺ recommended performing wudu before sleeping, especially if one has been intimate. This maintains a state of cleanliness and spiritual readiness.
- Bathing (ghusl): Before planned intimate encounters, a shower is both a hygienic and a Sunnah practice of presenting yourself well to your spouse.
04
The "Messenger" — Foreplay as Sunnah
"None of you should fall upon his wife like an animal falls upon a female animal — there should be a messenger between them." Someone asked: "What is the messenger?" He replied: "Kisses and words."
— Al-Daylami, Musnad al-Firdaws — Referenced extensively by classical scholars as core guidance on foreplay
This hadith establishes that foreplay — the physical and verbal preparation before intercourse — is Sunnah, not optional. Islamic scholars in all four madhabs confirm that adequate foreplay to ensure the wife's readiness and comfort is either recommended (mustahabb) or obligatory (wajib). Rushing to penetration without adequate preparation is both physically harmful (potential pain, insufficient lubrication) and a violation of the spirit of Sunnah.
What foreplay includes:
- Kind, loving words — verbal expression of desire and appreciation
- Kisses — explicitly mentioned by the Prophet ﷺ as the "messenger"
- Physical caressing and touching of the whole body
- Building emotional connection and atmosphere
- Patience — women typically require 15–20 minutes of consistent, attentive engagement before full physiological arousal
05
Creating the Right Environment
The Prophet ﷺ said: "Conceal (your intimate life)." (Al-Hakim). Islamic intimacy should be conducted in private — away from any possibility of others seeing or hearing. The bedroom should be a sanctuary. Practically:
- Ensure genuine privacy — locked door, children asleep, complete freedom from interruption
- Clean, comfortable environment — Ibn al-Qayyim noted that cleanliness and pleasant surroundings are part of honouring the intimacy Allah has given you
- Remove distractions — phones silenced; the spouse you are with deserves your complete presence
- Appropriate lighting — neither complete darkness (which removes the visual element that Allah made part of attraction) nor harsh brightness (which creates self-consciousness)
3. Mutual Consent and Rights in Islamic Marriage
The Islamic model of marital intimacy is built on mutual rights, not one-sided entitlement. Both husband and wife have haqq (rights) within intimacy — and both have responsibilities.
وَلَهُنَّ مِثْلُ الَّذِي عَلَيْهِنَّ بِالْمَعْرُوفِ
"And women have rights similar to those upon them, according to what is reasonable."
— Al-Baqarah 2:228
The Wife's Rights in Intimacy
- Right to satisfaction: Ibn al-Qayyim and Al-Daylami report the Prophet ﷺ saying a husband should not withdraw until the wife also reaches satisfaction. This is explicitly her Islamic right.
- Right to adequate foreplay: Scholars are unanimous — a husband must not rush. Her comfort and arousal are his responsibility.
- Right to pace: She may set the pace, request pauses, and communicate her needs without fear of consequences.
- Right to decline specific acts: She may decline acts that cause her pain or distress even within the broad halal space.
- Right to minimum frequency: Her right to intimacy is a recognised haqq — a husband who consistently and without excuse withholds intimacy is violating her rights and she may seek remedy through Islamic channels.
The Husband's Rights in Intimacy
- Right to available spouse: A wife should not refuse without legitimate reason (illness, exhaustion, spiritual state). The hadith warning women against refusing their husbands without reason is authentic — this right is real.
- Right to a present, engaged spouse: Not merely physical presence, but genuine participation in the intimacy.
- Right to privacy: "No man should tell what happened between him and his wife, and no woman should tell what happened between her and her husband." (Muslim 1437). Both parties have the right to complete confidentiality.
- Right to cleanliness: Both parties maintain the fitrah standards of cleanliness for each other.
⚠️ On Marital Coercion: The Islamic principle that a wife should not refuse without reason does NOT mean a husband may force his wife. The concept of marital rape did not exist historically in many legal systems — but Islamic ethics are clear: intimacy must be conducted with kindness, patience, and consideration. Any act that harms the wife physically or psychologically violates the Quranic command of rahmah and ma'ruf (kindness). A husband who forces himself on his wife is sinning against her, against the Sunnah, and against the spirit of the Quran.
4. What Is Halal, What Is Haram — The Complete Ruling
The general Islamic principle, stated explicitly by Ibn Qudamah in Al-Mughni, Ibn Hazm in Al-Muhalla, and confirmed by scholars of all four madhabs: everything between husband and wife is permissible in intimacy except that which is explicitly prohibited by a specific, authentic text.
The default is halal. The prohibited list is short and specific.
✅ What Is Explicitly Halal
All of these are permitted by scholarly consensus or strong majority opinion:
- All positions of vaginal intercourse — the Ayat (Al-Baqarah 2:223) explicitly says "however you wish"
- Oral stimulation of the genitals between husband and wife — the majority position of contemporary scholars including Sheikh al-Qaradawi, Ibn Baz's student research, and many others; disliked (makruh) by some but not prohibited (haram) by the strongest positions
- Manual stimulation (hand stimulation) of each other's genitals — halal by consensus
- Full body touching, caressing, massage — halal by consensus
- Kissing everywhere except the prohibited orifice — halal by consensus
- Viewing each other's bodies fully — halal by consensus; Ibn Hazm is explicit: "Everything of her is lawful for him to see"
- Intimate conversation, words of desire, verbal expression during intimacy — halal and Sunnah (the Prophet ﷺ spoke lovingly)
- Sexual intercourse in any room of the house (in private) — halal
- Using halal lubricants for comfort — halal
- Intimacy during the day or night — halal
- Using contraception with mutual agreement — halal (see section 8)
❌ What Is Explicitly Haram — The Short Prohibited List
The following are prohibited by explicit, authentic text and scholarly consensus:
✗ HARAM — Scholarly Consensus
1. Anal Intercourse
Prohibited by multiple authentic ahadith: "Do not approach women from their back passages" (Ibn Majah 1924, graded sahih), "Allah is not shy of the truth — do not have intercourse with women in their back passages" (Ahmad, Abu Dawud). This is haram by the consensus (ijma') of all four madhabs. There is no scholarly disagreement on this point.
The wisdom: Medical science confirms — the anal passage is not designed for penetrative intercourse. It lacks the natural lubrication and protective mucous membrane of the vagina. It contains different bacterial flora (E. coli and others) that cause infection when introduced to other areas. Penetration damages the anal sphincter, causing long-term incontinence. The Islamic prohibition is aligned perfectly with the medical evidence.
✗ HARAM — Quranic Prohibition
2. Intercourse During Menstruation (Haidh)
وَيَسْأَلُونَكَ عَنِ الْمَحِيضِ ۖ قُلْ هُوَ أَذًى فَاعْتَزِلُوا النِّسَاءَ فِي الْمَحِيضِ
"They ask you about menstruation. Say: It is harm (adha), so keep away from women during menstruation, and do not approach them until they are cleansed."
— Al-Baqarah 2:222
Vaginal intercourse during menstruation is prohibited. All other forms of intimacy remain halal — kissing, touching, manual stimulation above the navel (Shafi'i and Hanbali go to navel; Hanafi says just the private area). The prohibition is specifically vaginal intercourse during the active flow.
Medical alignment: The cervix is slightly open during menstruation, increasing risk of infection. Menstrual blood contains shed uterine lining and increased bacterial content. The prohibition protects both partners from infection risk.
✗ HARAM — Scholarly Consensus
3. Intercourse During Nifas (Postpartum Bleeding)
The same ruling as menstruation applies to nifas — the postpartum bleeding period following childbirth. Maximum nifas is 40 days by scholarly consensus; minimum is when the bleeding stops. When the bleeding stops completely, ghusl is performed and intimacy may resume. Before that: not permissible.
Medical alignment: The post-delivery uterus and cervix are highly vulnerable to infection during the nifas period. The cervix has not fully closed. Intercourse during this period carries significant risk of endometritis (uterine infection) and sepsis.
✗ HARAM
4. Intercourse During Ihram (Pilgrimage State)
During the state of ihram for Hajj or Umrah, all sexual activity is prohibited. This prohibition is Quranic (Al-Baqarah 2:197) and affects the validity of the Hajj if violated.
✗ HARAM
5. Intimate Acts That Cause Genuine Harm
The general Islamic principle of "la darar wa la dirar" (no harm and no reciprocal harm) applies within marriage. If a specific intimate act causes genuine physical or psychological harm to either spouse, it falls outside the permissible. A wife who experiences pain from a specific act and communicates this has the right to stop it. A husband who ignores this is violating both the Sunnah of rahmah and the general principle of la darar.
✗ HARAM
6. Sharing Details of Intimate Life
"Among the worst of people before Allah on the Day of Judgement is a man who approaches his wife and she approaches him, and then he spreads her secrets."
— Sahih Muslim 1437
The privacy of the marital intimate life is sacred in Islam. Discussing intimate details with friends, family, or on social media is haram. Both husband and wife are equally bound by this rule.
5. Intimate Hygiene — Islamic and Medical
Islamic hygiene practices are not separate from medical best practice — they are aligned with it. The fitrah practices prescribed by the Prophet ﷺ 1,400 years ago are confirmed by modern medicine as optimal intimate hygiene.
For Women
- External cleaning only: The vagina is self-cleaning internally. Douching (internal washing) disrupts the natural lactobacillus bacterial ecosystem and increases infection risk. Islam prescribes external cleaning (istinja) — consistent with medical guidance.
- Pubic hair: Sunnah to trim regularly (within 40 days maximum). Reduces bacterial accumulation and odour.
- Post-intimacy urination: Urinating shortly after intercourse significantly reduces the risk of urinary tract infections (UTIs) in women — bacteria from the vaginal area can enter the urethra during intercourse. Not a Sunnah requirement but a strong medical recommendation.
- Cotton underwear: Breathable fabrics reduce moisture accumulation and prevent yeast overgrowth.
- Intimate wash: Use pH-balanced, fragrance-free washes for the external area only. Regular soap disrupts the natural pH (3.8–4.5) and increases infection risk.
For Men
- Istinja: Proper cleaning after urination and intercourse. The Islamic istinja practice (water cleaning) is more thorough than toilet paper alone and prevents bacterial accumulation.
- Circumcision (khitan): One of the five acts of fitrah. Medical evidence confirms: circumcised men have significantly lower rates of UTIs, penile infections, and transmission of certain STIs including HPV. The WHO endorses male circumcision as a preventive health measure.
- Pubic and underarm hair trimming: Reduces bacterial and fungal accumulation in warm, moist areas.
- Washing hands before and after: Basic prevention of cross-contamination.
- Regular bathing: The ghusl required after intercourse ensures regular full-body cleansing is an Islamic obligation.
6. Physical Safety During Intimacy
Allah designed the human body with extraordinary care. Physical safety during intimacy means working with the body's design — not against it. Most intimate injuries result from rushing, inadequate preparation, or ignoring pain signals.
Lubrication — The Foundation of Physical Safety
Natural lubrication is the primary physical safety mechanism in sexual intercourse. Without adequate lubrication:
- Friction causes micro-tears in vaginal tissue — these are entry points for infection
- Intercourse is painful for the woman — causing harm which is against Islamic principles
- Vaginal tissue can be damaged, causing bleeding and long-term sensitivity issues
The solution: Adequate foreplay (15–20 minutes minimum), checking readiness before penetration, and where needed — halal lubricants. Water-based lubricants are available widely in Pakistan and are permissible by scholarly consensus. They are particularly recommended for:
- Women who are breastfeeding (oestrogen suppression causes dryness)
- Post-menopausal women
- Any couple where the woman experiences dryness despite arousal
The Pain Principle
Pain during intimacy is always a signal. Islamic ethics and medical ethics agree: pain is not something to "push through" in intimacy. It is information that something needs attention:
- Pain from insufficient arousal/lubrication: Stop. More foreplay. Ensure genuine arousal before attempting penetration.
- Pain from position: Change position. Certain positions (very deep penetration, particularly when the woman is not fully aroused) can cause cervical contact that is painful. Change the angle or depth.
- Persistent pain: Consult a doctor. Conditions like vaginismus, endometriosis, vulvodynia, or pelvic inflammatory disease cause pain and are all treatable. See our vaginismus guide.
- Pain from anal stimulation: This is your body confirming what the Quran and Sunnah already established — this area is not designed for this. Stop.
Positions and Physical Safety
From a physical safety perspective, the key principles:
- Avoid extreme compression of the abdomen during pregnancy — especially after 20 weeks. Side-lying and woman-on-top positions are safest during pregnancy.
- Avoid positions that put excessive weight on the wife's neck or spine
- Deep penetration: Only comfortable when the woman is fully aroused — vaginal tenting (elongation of the canal) occurs with full arousal and makes deep penetration comfortable. Without it, it is painful.
- Communicate throughout: "Is this comfortable?" "Is this okay?" is not awkward — it is Sunnah (the Prophet ﷺ was attentive to his wives). A spouse's comfort check is an act of love.
7. STI Prevention — For Married Couples
Within a committed, mutually monogamous Islamic marriage where both partners entered with no prior infections, the risk of STI transmission is essentially zero. Islam's sexual ethics — one partner, within nikah — is the most effective STI prevention framework in existence. However, some situations require awareness.
When STI Risk Exists Within Marriage
- One or both partners had previous relationships before nikah where infections could have been acquired
- Either partner was the victim of sexual violence
- Blood transfusions or medical procedures (HIV transmission risk)
- Certain infections (like herpes HSV-1) can be present without previous sexual contact — through childhood oral exposure
Important STIs to Know
HPV (Human Papillomavirus)
The most common STI globally. Often has no symptoms. Most strains clear on their own within 2 years. Some high-risk strains are linked to cervical cancer. The HPV vaccine (available in Pakistan) is recommended for girls before first sexual activity. Annual Pap smears after marriage are recommended for women.
Herpes (HSV-1 and HSV-2)
HSV-1 (oral herpes) affects majority of adults worldwide — often acquired in childhood through non-sexual contact. Can be transmitted to genitals through oral-genital contact. HSV-2 is genital herpes. Both are lifelong but manageable. Antiviral medication significantly reduces transmission risk and outbreak frequency.
HIV
Transmitted through blood, sexual fluids, and breast milk. Within a monogamous nikah where neither partner has prior exposure — essentially zero risk. The Islamic model of sexual ethics is the world's most effective HIV prevention programme. If either partner has had prior exposure risk: HIV testing is available at major hospitals in Pakistan and is confidential.
Getting Tested
If either partner has any prior risk factors: comprehensive STI testing before marriage, or early in marriage, provides clarity and peace of mind. This is available at Aga Khan Hospital, Ziauddin Hospital, and other major hospitals in Karachi. It is also a kind, responsible gift to your spouse.
Condoms Within Marriage — When They Apply
Condoms are halal within marriage (equivalent to azl — withdrawal — practised by the Sahabah). When are they relevant within marriage?
- When one partner has a confirmed STI and wants to protect the other while seeking treatment
- As a contraceptive method (with mutual agreement)
- During treatment for a vaginal/penile infection to prevent re-transmission
8. Family Planning in Islam
"We practised azl (withdrawal) during the time of the Messenger of Allah ﷺ, and the Quran was being revealed." — Meaning: the Prophet ﷺ was aware and did not prohibit it.
— Sahih Bukhari 5207, Muslim 1440 — Narrated by Jabir (RA)
Temporary contraception with mutual consent is halal in Islam. The Sahabah practised it during the time of the Prophet ﷺ. What is discouraged is permanent prevention of all children without medical necessity.
✓ HALAL Permitted Methods
- Condoms — halal by consensus
- Combined oral contraceptive pill — halal by majority
- Progestogen-only pill — halal
- Injectable contraception (Depo-Provera) — halal
- Withdrawal (azl) — halal, practised by Sahabah
- Natural family planning / fertility awareness methods — halal
⚠ DEBATED Scholarly Discussion
- Copper IUD — may prevent implantation; scholarly debate
- Hormonal IUD (Mirena) — same debate
- Emergency contraception — permitted if prevents fertilisation; debate if after fertilisation
- Vasectomy/tubal ligation — discouraged without medical necessity by most scholars
Consult a qualified scholar in your madhab for a ruling you are comfortable with on the debated methods.
9. Menstruation, Nifas and Intimacy Rules
وَيَسْأَلُونَكَ عَنِ الْمَحِيضِ ۖ قُلْ هُوَ أَذًى فَاعْتَزِلُوا النِّسَاءَ فِي الْمَحِيضِ ۖ وَلَا تَقْرَبُوهُنَّ حَتَّىٰ يَطْهُرْنَ
"They ask you about menstruation. Say: It is harm, so keep away from women during menstruation, and do not approach them until they are cleansed."
— Al-Baqarah 2:222
During Menstruation — What Is Permitted
- ✅ Kissing, hugging, cuddling — fully halal
- ✅ Sleeping together — halal
- ✅ Manual stimulation — halal (Hanafi: above the navel; Shafi'i/Hanbali: the area between navel and knee may be stimulated through a barrier)
- ✅ All non-penetrative intimacy — halal
- ✅ The wife may and should fulfil any of her husband's needs except vaginal intercourse
- ❌ Vaginal intercourse — haram during active flow
When Menstruation Ends
- When the flow has completely stopped, ghusl is performed
- After ghusl: intercourse is fully halal
- Minimum duration of menstruation: varies by madhab (Hanafi: 3 days minimum; Shafi'i: no minimum)
- Maximum: 10 days (Hanafi); 15 days (Shafi'i, Maliki, Hanbali)
- Blood after the maximum: treated as istihadah (abnormal bleeding) — different rulings apply; consult a scholar
Nifas (Postpartum Bleeding)
Same rulings as menstruation apply. Maximum nifas period: 40 days by consensus. If bleeding stops before 40 days: perform ghusl and intercourse is permissible. If bleeding continues past 40 days: treated as istihadah — consult a scholar and a gynaecologist (persistent postpartum bleeding past 40 days warrants medical evaluation).
10. After Intimacy — The Sunnah of Ghusl and Aftercare
"When you have intercourse and then want to go out, do not leave until you perform wudu, as this is more restful for you." And: "When one of you wants to return to his wife a second time, let him perform wudu between the two times."
— Abu Dawud 220, Muslim 308
01
Ghusl (Ritual Bath) — When It Becomes Obligatory
Ghusl becomes obligatory (fard) upon:
- Ejaculation (for men) — whether during intercourse, masturbation, or nocturnal emission
- Penetration (for both parties) — even if ejaculation does not occur, penetration obligates ghusl on both husband and wife
- End of menstruation or nifas — ghusl before resuming prayer and before intercourse
Ghusl must be performed before: salah (prayer), tawaf, touching the Quran.
The Sunnah ghusl: Begin with bismillah and the niyyah (intention) of purification. Wash both hands. Wash the private parts. Perform wudu. Then pour water over the entire body, beginning from the right side, ensuring water reaches all parts of the skin and scalp. Running water (shower) fulfils this excellently.
02
Wudu Without Full Ghusl — For Sleeping
If one wishes to sleep after intimacy without immediately performing ghusl: performing wudu is Sunnah. "If one of you becomes junub (impure after intercourse) and wants to sleep, let him perform wudu as for prayer." (Bukhari 287, Muslim 306). This is not a substitute for ghusl before prayer — but it maintains a level of ritual cleanliness during sleep.
03
Physical Aftercare — The Medical and Human Dimension
Beyond the Islamic obligations, aftercare — the physical and emotional attention after intimacy — is part of the mawaddah and rahmah that Allah placed between spouses:
- For women: Urinate within 30 minutes — significantly reduces UTI risk
- Gentle cleaning: Warm water, external only for women
- Physical closeness: The post-intimacy period is when oxytocin is highest — physical closeness (holding, resting together) deepens bonding. This is not optional for a loving marriage.
- Words of appreciation: "Kisses and words" were the messenger before — they are also the beautiful close after.
- Hydration: Both partners should drink water — physical exertion and fluid loss warrant replenishment.
11. When Problems Arise — Islamic and Medical Guidance
Every couple encounters challenges in their intimate life at some point. The Islamic approach is not to ignore these or feel shame — it is to seek knowledge and treatment, just as you would for any other health issue.
Common Challenges and Where to Turn
- Painful intercourse (women): See a gynaecologist. Likely causes: insufficient arousal, vaginismus, endometriosis, infections. All treatable. Our vaginismus guide →
- Erectile dysfunction: See a urologist or GP. Primarily treatable. Our ED guide →
- Premature ejaculation: Very common, very treatable. Our PE guide →
- Mismatched desire: Communicate, address root causes (stress, hormonal, relationship), consider couples counselling. Low libido guide →
- Infections (UTI, yeast): See a doctor — both are easily treated. Prevent through hygiene practices in section 5.
The Islamic Instruction on Seeking Help
"Make use of medical treatment, for Allah has not made a disease without appointing a remedy for it, with the exception of one disease — old age."
— Abu Dawud 3855, authenticated by Al-Albani
Seeking medical help for intimate health issues is not just permissible — it is part of fulfilling the rights of your spouse. A husband who refuses to seek treatment for ED is failing his wife's Islamic rights. A wife who refuses to address vaginismus is failing her husband's. Both are treatable. Seek help.
12. Du'as for Marital Intimacy — Complete Collection
The du'as below transform intimate life from a physical act into an integrated dimension of your Islamic worship. Make them habitual.
Before Intimacy
بِسْمِ اللَّهِ، اللَّهُمَّ جَنِّبْنَا الشَّيْطَانَ، وَجَنِّبِ الشَّيْطَانَ مَا رَزَقْتَنَا
"In the name of Allah. O Allah, keep the Shaytan away from us and keep the Shaytan away from what You have blessed us with (our children)."
— Bukhari 3271, Muslim 1434
The Husband's Du'a Upon Meeting His Wife
اللَّهُمَّ إِنِّي أَسْأَلُكَ خَيْرَهَا وَخَيْرَ مَا جَبَلْتَهَا عَلَيْهِ، وَأَعُوذُ بِكَ مِنْ شَرِّهَا وَشَرِّ مَا جَبَلْتَهَا عَلَيْهِ
"O Allah, I ask You for the goodness in her and the good that You have created her with, and I seek refuge in You from her evil and the evil that You have created her with."
— Abu Dawud 2160
Du'a for Blessing in Marriage
بَارَكَ اللَّهُ لَكَ وَبَارَكَ عَلَيْكَ وَجَمَعَ بَيْنَكُمَا فِي خَيْرٍ
"May Allah bless you, and shower His blessings upon you, and join you together in goodness."
— Tirmidhi 1091, Abu Dawud 2130 — Said by the Prophet ﷺ to newlyweds
Du'a for Protection of Future Children
رَبَّنَا هَبْ لَنَا مِنْ أَزْوَاجِنَا وَذُرِّيَّاتِنَا قُرَّةَ أَعْيُنٍ وَاجْعَلْنَا لِلْمُتَّقِينَ إِمَامًا
"Our Lord, grant us from among our wives and offspring comfort to our eyes and make us an example for the righteous."
— Al-Furqan 25:74 — A du'a for righteous spouses and children
Du'a After Ghusl (Purification)
أَشْهَدُ أَنْ لَا إِلَهَ إِلَّا اللَّهُ وَحْدَهُ لَا شَرِيكَ لَهُ، وَأَشْهَدُ أَنَّ مُحَمَّدًا عَبْدُهُ وَرَسُولُهُ، اللَّهُمَّ اجْعَلْنِي مِنَ التَّوَّابِينَ وَاجْعَلْنِي مِنَ الْمُتَطَهِّرِينَ
"I bear witness that there is no god but Allah alone, with no partner, and I bear witness that Muhammad is His slave and Messenger. O Allah, make me among those who repent and make me among those who purify themselves."
— After wudu and ghusl, Tirmidhi 55
May Allah place mawaddah and rahmah between you
وَجَعَلَ بَيْنَكُم مَّوَدَّةً وَرَحْمَةً
"And He placed between you affection and mercy." — Ar-Rum 30:21
This guide is based on the Quran, authenticated hadith, and the scholarly consensus of the four madhabs. All Islamic rulings cited include their primary sources. For specific fiqh questions about your situation, always consult a qualified scholar.