---
title: How to set up a mosque library
Metadescription: A practical guide to setting up a mosque library: organising an Islamic-studies collection, cataloguing it, and lending to the congregation.
Display description: Setting up a mosque library is mostly turning a collection of donated books into something the congregation can borrow from reliably. The steps are simple and need no budget.
author: Dan Edwards
author_role: Founder
author_url: https://danedwardsdeveloper.com
author_linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dan-edwards-developer
published: 2026-06-22
---

Token estimate: ~1,100

# How to set up a mosque library

By **[Dan Edwards](https://yourbooknest.com/contact)**, Founder.

Many mosque libraries begin as a cupboard or shelf of donated books that people borrow informally, with no record of what has gone where. Turning that into a working library is a straightforward project, and it needs no money, no training and no special equipment.

## 1\. Gather and sort the collection

Bring the books together and sort them into the categories your congregation actually looks for, such as Quran and tafsir, hadith, fiqh, seerah and history, and children's books. Keep the categories broad. A few clear sections serve people far better than a detailed scheme only the cataloguer understands.

Set aside anything too damaged to lend, and decide what to do with duplicates, you can keep them as extra copies of the same title rather than separate entries.

## 2\. Agree the simple rules

A mosque library runs on a few plain decisions.

-   How long is a loan? Three or four weeks is typical.
-   Who can borrow? Usually anyone in the congregation.
-   Any fines? Almost always none, the library runs on trust.

Put these on a small card by the shelf. That card is the whole policy, and it should stay that brief.

## 3\. Catalogue each book once

Record each book with title and author. Transliterated spellings of Arabic titles and author names vary, so choose one convention and apply it consistently, or the same book becomes hard to find later. If you hold several copies of a title, note how many.

Catalogue straight into a simple library tool rather than a spreadsheet, so the catalogue and the lending live in one place from the start.

## 4\. Start lending properly

From the first loan, record which copy went out, who took it, and when it is due, then close the loan when the book returns. That habit is what stops a collection slowly emptying. No barcodes or patron accounts are needed, the borrower is a name recorded by whichever volunteer is on.

## 5\. Bring in your volunteers

If several people will help, give each their own login rather than a shared password. Anyone can then add or lend a book on their day, and you can see what is happening without untangling a single shared account.

## Setting up with Your Book Nest

Your Book Nest takes a mosque library from a donated shelf to a working system. You catalogue books by title and author, set copy counts where you hold more than one, and lend to named borrowers with due dates, all in the browser with nothing to install.

It keeps things simple: no MARC, no fines, no public catalogue, no forced patron accounts, and a separate login for each volunteer. It is free for up to 100 books, which covers most mosque collections, and the home page is a live demo you can try with no sign-up before you begin.

## Q&A

**Q: How do I set up a mosque library?**
A: Gather and sort the donated books into broad categories, agree simple rules such as a loan length, catalogue each book by title and author, and record loans from the first one. None of it needs a budget or special equipment.

**Q: How should I handle Arabic titles and transliteration?**
A: Pick one transliteration convention and apply it consistently across the catalogue. The exact choice matters less than the consistency, because mixed spellings of the same name make a book hard to find later.

**Q: Do I need special software to start a mosque library?**
A: No, but a simple library tool that catalogues and lends in one place makes it much easier than a spreadsheet. Your Book Nest does both in the browser and is free for up to 100 books.

**Q: How do I keep track of who borrowed a book?**
A: Record each loan: which copy went out, who took it and when it is due, then close it on return. In a high-trust mosque library the borrower is just a name, with no account or fine required.
