Nitnem Audio - Sikh daily prayers & audio
Experience serenity with a journey through Sikh prayers, beautifully presented in your chosen language & format.

- 2.5 Version
- 1.6 Score
- 635K+ Downloads
- Free License
- 3+ Content Rating
The Nitnem Audio Path App (translated as "Nitnem Gutka") serves as a compilation of various Sikh Banis that Sikhs are encouraged to recite daily at specific times.
This app allows users to read and listen to 'Nitnem Audio Path' on their mobile devices in English, Punjabi, and Hindi.
The Nitnem Gutka Sahib App features the following:
* Japji Sahib (Amritvela)
* Jaap Sahib (Amritvela)
* Chaupai Sahib (Morning)
* Sukhmani Sahib
* Rehras Sahib (Evening)
* Kirtan Sohila (Night)
* Anand Sahib (Morning)
* Dukh Bhanjani Sahib
* Lawa
* Tav Prasad Savaiye (Morning)
* Ardaas
* Shabad Hazare
* Aarti Sahib
* Asa Ki Vaar
* Barah Maha
* Basant Ki Var
* Raag Mala
Available languages include 'Nitnem Hindi', 'Nitnem Punjabi' (Gurmukhi), and Nitnem Gutka English.
Listen to 'Nitnem Audio' online.
- The pause button allows you to stop the audio and resume playback from where you left off.
- The stop button will halt the path completely, starting it over from the current page when played again.
Nitnem Audio is accompanied by lyrics.
Concerning Nitnem Gurbani:
Nit-Nem (translated as Daily Naam) is an assembly of various Banis meant to be recited by Sikhs throughout the day at specified intervals. Sikhs typically read nitnems at Gurdwaras. The Nit-Nem Banis generally include the five key Banis listed below, which baptized Sikhs read each morning between 3:00 am and 6:00 am (known as Amrit Vela or the Ambrosial Hours), along with 'Rehras Sahib' in the evening around 6:00 pm, and 'Kirtan Sohila' at night around 9:00 pm.
The five morning Banis are recommended for early morning reading, while Rehras Sahib can be recited in the evening, and Kirtan Sohila is suggested just before bedtime.
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# Ads are displayed in a non-intrusive manner to avoid disrupting your Path experience.
Dawn’s Digital Divān: How This App Became My Spiritual Anchor
Nitnem Audio Path transcends the label of "app" — it’s a portable sanctuary that honors tradition while embracing the realities of modern devotion.
As someone balancing faith with a frenetic urban life, its grace lies in how seamlessly it integrates Gurbani into the rhythm of my day. Waking before sunrise, the app’s crystal-clear Punjabi recitation of Japji Sahib fills my room, not with digital sterility, but with the warmth of a live divān.
The nuanced pauses between pauris, the resonant dhad of the tabla in Asa Ki Vaar, the delicate rise and fall of the raga in Sukhmani Sahib — every auditory detail feels meticulously preserved, turning my commute or kitchen into sacred space.
What sets it apart is its profound accessibility. Switching between Punjabi Gurmukhi, Hindi, and English translations mid-recitation allowed me to deepen my understanding without breaking focus.
The pause/resume function became indispensable during interruptions; halting Chaupai Sahib to soothe a child, then resuming exactly where devotion paused, honored both my spiritual duty and worldly responsibilities.
I was particularly moved by the timed Bani prompts: a gentle notification at dusk for Rehras Sahib transformed rushed evenings into anchored reflection, while Kirtan Sohila’s moonlit melodies softened the edges of the day.
Even the ad implementation — discreetly placed between Banis, never overlaying sacred text — reflects thoughtful reverence for the user’s focus.
Beyond utility, the app nurtures sangat (community) in solitude.
Following lyrical Gurmukhi while listening cultivated my pronounciation; hearing Ardaas’s collective yearning in recorded unison stirred connection across distances.
For diaspora Sikhs or seekers exploring Sikhi, this isn’t just convenience — it’s preservation. The closing Raag Mala’s cascading notes at day’s end don’t just play; they resonate with the weight of centuries, a digital rumāl unfurling grace.
Nitnem Audio Path doesn’t replicate tradition — it renews it, ensuring that wherever life takes you, Amrit Vela’s holiest hours remain a touch away, uninterrupted and immaculate.
- Version2.5
- UpdateJul 11, 2025
- DeveloperSmart Solutions IT
- CategoryBooks & Reference
- Requires AndroidAndroid 4.0.3 – 4.0.4+
- Downloads635K+
- Package Namecom.smartsolution.nitnempathpro
- Signature24cf02822e9046ea3a67ed703c01e96d
- Available on
- ReportFlag as inappropriate
Convenient for users who cannot read Punjabi
Helpful for beginners in learning prayers
Provides audio for spiritual practices
Useful offline access for daily prayer
Allows connection to spirituality on-the-go
Various paths and audio available
Community support through user feedback
Encourages daily devotion with reminders
Improves understanding with audio guidance
Audio speed is too fast for comprehension
Missing Rahao in Chaupai Sahib text
Errors in some translations (Chinese letters)
Lack of auto-scroll feature during use
Incorrect aspects in specific path texts
Audio not synced with written content
Issues with app displaying wrong logos
Incomplete texts in certain paths
Specific words improperly translated or displayed