Tools & Reviews

5 Best Free Online Japa Counter Apps in 2025

A practitioner's honest comparison of every major digital mala available today — no app download required.

AK
Aman Kumar Founder & Spiritual Wellness Writer
Published: May 19, 2026 7 Min Read
AK
Aman Kumar
Founder & Spiritual Wellness Writer | About the Author
Updated: May 19, 2026

If you practice Japa meditation, you know that accurate counting is the backbone of a disciplined sadhana. A miscounted mala can break your rhythm and diminish the satisfaction of completing your daily target. In 2025, the market for free online Japa counters has grown significantly — but not all tools are built with the devotee's needs in mind.

As someone who uses a digital counter daily, I have tested every major option available. Here is my honest, practitioner's review.

Why Use a Digital Japa Counter at All?

A physical Tulsi mala is sacred and irreplaceable for serious practitioners. However, digital counters fill a critical gap: they are available everywhere. You can count mantras during your commute, at your office desk, or while traveling — without carrying physical beads. They also provide data that a physical mala cannot: total rounds per day, streak tracking, and daily habit consistency reports.

The 5 Best Free Online Japa Counters in 2025

#1

Radha Naam Jap Counter — radhanamjapcounter.com

Our top pick for 2025. This is the most spiritually focused, feature-complete free online Japa counter available. It tracks your 108-bead count, logs completed rounds, records daily streaks, and even provides haptic feedback at round completion on mobile devices. It requires no login, no app download, and works as a PWA (Progressive Web App) installable directly to your home screen.

? 108-count digital mala
? Streak tracking & stats
? No login required
? Works offline (PWA)
? Hindi & English UI
? Haptic feedback

Best for: Vaishnav practitioners, devotees of Radha Krishna, anyone wanting a complete free digital sadhana companion.

#2

Simple Tally Counter Apps (Browser-Based)

Several generic tally counter websites exist that simply increment a number on each click or tap. While functional for basic counting, they offer no spiritual context, no 108-round awareness, no streaks, and no devotional interface. They work in a pinch, but feel sterile for use during bhajan or prayer sessions.

? Simple interface
? No 108-round tracking
? No streak logging
? No devotional UI

Best for: Emergency counting when no other tool is available.

#3

Native App Counters (ISKCON Digital Japa, etc.)

Several religious organizations have released dedicated Android/iOS Japa apps. While well-built, they require a download, often need an account, and are targeted at specific traditions. Their offline functionality is excellent, but the friction of downloading and setting up an app can be a barrier for casual practitioners.

? Excellent offline support
? Requires app download
? Often needs account creation
? Tradition-specific
#4

Google Assistant / Siri Voice Counting

Some practitioners use voice assistants to count for them. While this is creative, it fundamentally breaks the principle of Japa — the practitioner's own physical participation in the counting is part of the meditative discipline. It is useful for accessibility, but not recommended as a primary counting method.

Best for: Accessibility needs only.

#5

Spreadsheet / Notes App Counting

Using a phone notepad or a Google Sheet to manually track counts is a time-honored method for serious practitioners who track mala by mala. While accurate, it is cumbersome for real-time use during active chanting. Best used for offline logging after a session rather than during.

Best for: Long-form sadhana tracking and journaling after practice.

The Verdict: Our Recommendation

For the vast majority of practitioners in 2025, a browser-based, no-login online Japa counter offers the ideal combination of accessibility, spirituality, and functionality. You do not need to download anything, create an account, or trust a third party with your data. The Radha Naam Jap Counter remains the most complete, devotion-focused free option available today.

Whatever tool you choose, what matters most is consistency — chanting the holy names every single day, in whatever format supports your unique lifestyle and schedule.

AK

About the Author: Aman Kumar

Aman Kumar is the founder of Radha Naam Jap Counter and a dedicated practitioner of Gaudiya Vaishnava bhakti traditions. He built this platform to provide devotees with a clean, honest, and accessible digital sadhana tool. Learn more about the founder ?