Asma-ul-Husna Table With Abjad Values

Full table of the 99 Names of Allah with their Abjad Kabir/Saghir values, optionally filtered by Saghir.

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How this calculator works

What it does: Full table of the 99 Names of Allah with their Abjad Kabir/Saghir values, optionally filtered by Saghir.

You enter: Filter by Saghir (1-9, optional).

Method: Each Arabic letter is assigned its classical Abjad value; the calculator sums those values and derives the reduced number, dominant element and ruling planet using traditional Ilm, ul, Adad rules.

Result: Press Calculate above to see your full result; the detailed interpretation is explained below.

ⓘ Historical and cultural reference based on classical Islamic numerology (Ilm, ul, Adad / Abjad). For educational interest only, not a religious ruling.

The Asma-ul-Husna, the 99 Names of Allah, are central to Islamic devotion, and each one also carries an Abjad value. This table brings the names together with their numbers and meanings in one place, and lets you filter by root number to find the names that share a particular Saghir.

What the Table Shows

For each of the 99 Names you can see its transliteration, its meaning, and its Abjad value, both the full Kabir total and the reduced Saghir root. Read top to bottom it is a complete reference, and with the filter applied it becomes a quick way to group the names by their numbers.

How the Values Are Calculated

Each name is written in Arabic, and the Abjad value is the sum of its letters, following the classical order from Alif 1 up to Ghain 1000. Reducing that total to a single digit gives the Saghir. The same method used for any name applies here, which is what lets the names be compared with a person's own name in tools like the Ism-e-Azam finder.

Using the Root Number Filter

If you choose a root number, the table shows only the names whose Saghir matches it. This is handy when you already know your own name's root and want to see which of the 99 Names line up with it, or when you simply want to study the names in numerical groups rather than in their traditional order.

A Note on the Names

The 99 Names are treated with reverence in Islamic tradition, and this table is offered as a study and reference aid. The meanings given are short summaries of each attribute, and the numbers are a feature of the Arabic letters. Neither replaces deeper study of the names and their significance.

How the Names Are Traditionally Grouped

The 99 Names are often grouped by theme in Islamic learning, for example names of mercy, names of majesty, and names of power. That thematic grouping is about meaning. The number filter on this page offers a different lens, grouping the names by their Abjad root instead, which sits alongside the traditional themes rather than replacing them.

Studying the Names by Number

Looking at the names in numerical groups can be a fresh way to learn them. You might notice that several names you already know share a root, or use the grouping as a simple study aid, working through one number at a time. The table keeps the meaning beside each name so the study stays rooted in what the names actually express.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I see only the names for my root number?

Yes. Apply the root-number filter and the table shows only the names whose Saghir matches the number you choose, which is useful for finding names that line up with your own.

Are both Kabir and Saghir shown?

Yes. Each name lists its full Kabir total and its reduced Saghir root, so you can use whichever value you need.

How is this different from the Ism-e-Azam finder?

This table is a full reference you can browse and filter. The Ism-e-Azam finder takes your own name, works out its root, and returns the matching names for you automatically.

Does grouping by number change the names' meaning?

No. The number filter is just a study lens. The meaning of each name comes from its traditional sense, which the table always shows alongside the value.

Do I need to enter anything to see the table?

No. The full table of 99 Names is there to browse as soon as you open it. The root-number filter is optional and simply narrows the list when you want a specific group.

Related calculators

Want to explore more? These Islamic numerology tools pair well with this one: Dua Abjad Counter, Ilm Ul Jafar, Ilm Ul Huroof and Wafq Magic Square. Each one looks at the subject from a slightly different angle, so trying a few together gives you a fuller, more rounded picture. You can also see every tool in this tradition on the Islamic numerology calculators page, or browse the full list of calculators.

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