Dar-ul-Islah mosque in Teaneck, NJ
3.8
6 reviews

Dar-ul-Islah

320 Fabry Terrace, Teaneck, NJ

Sunni (Traditional)

This mosque is also known as 'The Teaneck Mosque' although there is another mosque in Teaneck as well, known as 'Nida-ul-Islam'.

Photos

Photo of Dar-ul-Islah
Zain MughalApr 16, 2025

Hours

MondayClosed
TuesdayClosed
WednesdayClosed
ThursdayClosed
Friday02:35 PM - 12:00 AM
SaturdayClosed
SundayClosed

Location

320 Fabry Terrace, Teaneck, NJ

3.8
6 reviews
5
4
3
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1
G

Georgina Prentice

Sep 19, 201478 reviews
5

Beautiful community. Brand new bathroom and separate Wudu room.

F

Fellow Review

Apr 15, 20144 reviews
5

Amazing youth group and beautiful building mashAllah. Could use some diversity though.

A

A E

Feb 18, 20131 review
3

Pretty inclusive mosque. If you aren't from the community or are not Pakistani you are not given Salam. Beautiful space though, easily seen from the highway.

R

Rana Sanaullah

Jan 13, 201314 reviews
4

Nice location and diverse demographics. Many affluent people of the area attend. Affiliated with ISNA and CAIR as their members usually attend and give speeches.

U

Usman C

Jan 28, 201116 reviews
4

Very nice masjid, if you put /mobile at the end of the website you can see the prayer times formatted for iPhone/Android. 'Asr jamaat is at the later Hanafi time. The masjid has been here since the late 1970's, 5 prayers a day and Jummah (1pm-1:40) each week. While construction is going on the women's entrance is closed and sisters will have to enter via the side door - the door is labeled. There's a secondary parking lot about half a block down if the small masjid lot is full.

S

Saraji UmmZaid

Mar 23, 200720 reviews
2

This is a very nice masjid, in terms of the physical structure. There is adequate parking, and it is handicapped accessible. Women pray behind a curtain in the main prayer hall. There are two entrances to the masjid. However, the women tend to be very poorly behaved. Visiting imams and speakers from around the world have complained about this. Over the several times I've been here, I've seen women refuse to stand next to sisters of a different ethnic group during prayers (ie, moving away from the sister), eating in the prayer hall (the carpet often smells like food when you make sujud), walking in front of people who are praying, moving around during the prayer (I mean changing their position in line and so forth), and talking. I don't know how it is for men, but as a woman who is not Indo-Pak, I felt very unwelcomed, and I was really turned off by the behavior of the women when it comes to listening to the speakers / khutbah and praying with attention to the Creator.