Editorial Guidelines

Naseeb is a matchmaking app, not a religious authority, and our Resources section is written with that distinction deliberately kept clear. This page explains how we research, write and review that content, so you can judge how much weight to give it.

What our writers do

  • Write about the practical side of finding a spouse, process, safety, communication, and planning, where our own product and community experience gives us something genuine to add.
  • Draw on established, mainstream sources rather than personal opinion when a topic touches Islamic rulings.
  • Flag clearly, in the article itself, whenever a topic involves a genuine difference of scholarly opinion, rather than presenting one view as settled.

What our writers don't do

  • Issue religious rulings (fatwas) ourselves, on any topic.
  • Present a single scholar's or school's position as the only valid one where legitimate differences exist.
  • Cite a hadith without naming its source, or a Qur'anic verse without its reference.

When we recommend a local scholar instead

For anything that turns on the specifics of your situation, a talaq or khula in progress, inheritance, or the conditions around a specific polygynous marriage, we point you to a local imam or qualified scholar rather than attempting to answer for your case. General background on these topics is still covered in the Resources section. The specific ruling for your circumstances isn't something a website should provide.

Review and updates

Articles show a "last updated" date at the bottom. Where a topic benefits from review by someone with deeper community or religious knowledge, the article credits that reviewer by name. We're building this review network out gradually. An article without a named reviewer today may have one added as that process matures, and we'd rather say so plainly than imply a review that didn't happen.

Corrections

If something in the Resources section is inaccurate or out of date, tell us at support@naseeb.app and we'll correct it.