The ablution before prayer — purifying body and intention. A complete Hanafi guide with both the obligatory minimum and the full prophetic method.
يَا أَيُّهَا ٱلَّذِينَ ءَامَنُوٓا۟ إِذَا قُمْتُمْ إِلَى ٱلصَّلَوٰةِ فَٱغْسِلُوا۟ وُجُوهَكُمْ وَأَيْدِيَكُمْ إِلَى ٱلْمَرَافِقِ وَٱمْسَحُوا۟ بِرُءُوسِكُمْ وَأَرْجُلَكُمْ إِلَى ٱلْكَعْبَيْنِ
"O you who have believed, when you rise to perform prayer, wash your faces and your forearms to the elbows, and wipe over your heads, and wash your feet to the ankles."
Sūrah al-Māʾidah · 5:6 · Sahih InternationalWudu is the foundation of Salat. The Prophet ﷺ said: 'No prayer is accepted without purification.' (Sahih Muslim 224) Without wudu, no prayer is valid — and so this short ritual is one of the first things every Muslim learns.
This page covers wudu in two parts: first the four obligatory acts (the bare minimum for valid wudu), then the complete prophetic method with all the recommended sunnahs that bring greater reward.
These are the minimum requirements for wudu to be valid. They come directly from Sūrah al-Māʾidah 5:6. If any one of these four is missed, the wudu is invalid and any prayer performed with it is also invalid.
Wash the entire face once — from the hairline above the forehead to underneath the chin, and from one earlobe to the other. Water must flow over every part of the visible face. Men with thick beards must let water reach the skin underneath.
Wash both arms once — from the fingertips up to and including the elbows. The elbows themselves must be washed; this is a commonly missed area. Make sure water reaches between the fingers.
Wipe at least one quarter of the head with wet hands. Note: this is a wipe, not a wash — water flows from the hand onto the head, not from above. Use fresh water on your hands rather than the wetness left over from washing the arms. This is the Hanafi position; other schools differ on the amount.
Wash both feet once — up to and including the ankle bones. The Prophet ﷺ once warned: 'Woe to the heels from the Fire' (Bukhari 60, Muslim 241) — referring to those who leave their heels dry during wudu. Make sure water reaches every part of the foot.
This is the full sunnah method as the Prophet ﷺ taught it. The four farḍ acts above are included within this sequence — performing wudu this way fulfils both the obligation and the recommended practice, bringing far greater reward.
Intend in your heart that you are performing wudu for the sake of Allah, in order to be in a state of purity for prayer. Note: in the Hanafi school, niyyah is sunnah for wudu, not farḍ — but it should never be neglected, as it transforms a physical wash into an act of worship.
Begin by saying Bismillāh — 'In the name of Allah'. The Prophet ﷺ said: 'There is no wudu for the one who does not mention the name of Allah upon it.' (Tirmidhi 25, Ibn Majah 397)
Wash both hands up to the wrists three times, beginning with the right. Make sure water reaches between the fingers.
Take water into the mouth and swirl it around three times, then spit it out. If you are not fasting, gargle gently. Using a miswak (or your finger) before this is itself a sunnah.
Use the right hand to draw water gently into the nostrils, then use the left hand to blow it out. Repeat three times. Avoid being excessive if you are fasting.
Wash the entire face three times — hairline to chin, ear to ear. The first wash fulfils the farḍ; the second and third are sunnah.
Wash the right arm three times from fingertips to elbow (including the elbow), then the left arm three times. Run wet fingers between the fingers of each hand (this is called khilāl).
Wet both hands with fresh water. Place them on the front of the head and pass them backwards to the nape of the neck, then return them to the front. This is done only once.
Without taking new water, use your index fingers to wipe the inside of each ear, and your thumbs to wipe behind each ear. The same wetness from wiping the head is used.
Wash the right foot three times, then the left foot three times. Run wet fingers between the toes (the khilāl of the toes — use the little finger of the left hand). Make sure the heels and ankles are thoroughly washed.
It is sunnah to recite the following testimony and supplication immediately after completing your wudu. Do not recite it inside the bathroom — step out first if needed.
Once you have wudu, you remain in a state of purity until one of the following occurs. When wudu is broken, it must be performed again before the next prayer.
Any discharge from the front or back passages — urine, stool, or passing wind — breaks wudu.
Deep sleep that causes loss of awareness breaks wudu. Light dozing while sitting upright does not.
Fainting, unconsciousness, intoxication, or anything that causes loss of awareness.
In the Hanafi school, blood or pus that flows from a wound — to the point that it would need to be wiped away — breaks wudu.
A mouthful of vomit (in the Hanafi school) breaks wudu.
In the Hanafi school, audible laughter during the prayer itself breaks both the prayer and the wudu — though laughter outside prayer does not.
Once relevant ruling
If you put on leather socks (or thick socks meeting certain conditions) while in a state of wudu, you may wipe over them rather than washing the feet when renewing wudu. The duration is 24 hours for a resident and 72 hours for a traveller, beginning from the moment wudu is first broken after putting them on.
To wipe: with wet fingers, wipe the top of each sock once, drawing your fingers from the toes towards the shin. The bottom of the sock is not wiped.
Dry ablution
If water is genuinely unavailable, or using it would cause harm (illness, severe cold with no shelter, etc.), Allah has permitted tayammum — a symbolic ablution using clean earth or dust.
The method: with the intention of purification, strike the palms once on a clean dusty or earthen surface, blow off any excess, and wipe the entire face once. Then strike the palms again, and wipe each arm up to and including the elbow, beginning with the right. Tayammum is then complete and replaces wudu for one prayer.
The prophetic example
The Prophet ﷺ would perform wudu with very small amounts of water — sometimes as little as a single mudd (about 750ml). He warned against being excessive even at the bank of a flowing river. Wudu is a purification, not a wash — let the water reach what it needs to reach, and no more.
With wudu complete, you are in a state of purity and ready to stand before Allah in prayer. The Prophet ﷺ said: 'When a Muslim performs wudu and washes his face, every sin he committed with his eyes is washed away with the water...' (Sahih Muslim 244)
The content on this page has been compiled and cross-referenced against the following authoritative Hanafi sources, classical fiqh manuals, and authentic ḥadīth collections.
A note on accuracy: This guide has been prepared with careful research and cross-referencing, but we are not scholars of Islamic jurisprudence. It is intended as a learning aid, not as a substitute for formal study or scholarly guidance.
If you have personal questions about your wudu, please consult a qualified local imam or trusted scholar. If you find any error on this page, please contact us — we take this responsibility seriously and will correct it immediately.
May Allah accept the effort and forgive any shortcomings.