Radhe RadheFree Radha Naam Jap Counter
Radha Naam Japa Counter — Free & Online
A free Radha Naam Japa Counter online — one tap per naam, a completed mala at every 108. Radhe Radhe on any device, no app, no credit card.
राधा
Every naam — a flower offered
One counter, every call
Count Every Radha Naam and Mantra
Radhe Radhe, Shri Radhe, Jai Shree Radhe, or Radha Krishna together — one tap is one repetition, whichever call your tradition uses. Underneath it is a simple Radha name counter; the naam you give it is yours.
Full mantras count just as cleanly — Om Shri Radhayai Namah, Om Hreem Shri Radhikayai Namah, or the Radha Gayatri, one tap per complete repetition. Choose her once — naam, mantra, an image of Radha Rani — and the counter remembers: every session opens already hers.
राधे राधे
Radhe Radhe
श्री राधे
Shri Radhe
जय श्री राधे
Jai Shree Radhe
राधा कृष्ण
Radha Krishna
One mala of Radha naam
Radha Naam 108 Times — Thread the Full Garland
A japa mala is, literally, a garland — and Radha naam 108 times is that garland threaded complete, one flower per naam. Every tap threads the next; at the 108th the strand ties itself off and a fresh one starts without you touching a thing. Underneath, this page is the same free online japa counter used across traditions — here it threads garlands of Radha naam, daily.
The garland grows with the practice. Sixteen malas is 1,728 naam; a daily 1,008 is its own quiet discipline; and a long sankalp — Radha naam a lakh, even a crore — is threaded one steady 108 at a time. Today's malas, the month's total, and the lifetime count all move with every tap, so the vow stays exact while your mind stays on the naam.
The greeting that is a jap
Radhe Radhe Jap — The Name Vrindavan Breathes
In Vrindavan and Barsana, Radhe Radhe is how people say hello — and goodbye, and thank you, and everything between. The greeting is the jap: every meeting adds one more naam, and nobody in Braj finds that strange. No other name is woven into ordinary speech quite this way.
Taken up as deliberate practice, Radhe Radhe jap is the simplest counted sadhana there is. Radhe is the calling form of her name — you are not speaking about her, you are speaking to her. Tap once per Radhe Radhe; 108 taps complete the mala; the calling continues.
राधे राधे
Radhe Radhe
Every greeting — one more naam
A garland of 28
28 Names of Radha Rani — Count Every Name
Braj keeps a garland of 28 names of Radha Rani, recited as one unbroken round — each name a flower threaded onto the last. In recent years the round has travelled far beyond Braj through Vrindavan satsangs, notably those of Premanand Maharaj ji, and thousands now keep it as daily practice.
Count the round the way Braj counts it: one tap per name. Set a custom mala size of 28 and the counter closes the round exactly on the 28th name — custom sizes are a premium feature, and every new account gets premium free for 14 days. The longer garlands count the same way: the 108 names of Radhika — the Radhika Ashtottara Shatanama — pair beautifully with the classic 108 mala, one name per bead. Even the thousand names of the Radha Sahasranama count the same way — one tap at a time.
Why her name is chanted
Benefits of Chanting Radha Naam Daily
Radha Rani — daughter of Vrishabhanu, queen of Barsana — is more than Krishna's beloved in the traditions of Braj. Gaudiya theology names her the Hladini Shakti: the bliss-power of the Divine itself, devotion in its highest form standing on its own feet. That is why Braj holds a teaching that startles newcomers — her name is dearer to Krishna than his own, and he is said to chant it himself.
What does daily Radha naam give? The tradition answers with one word: madhurya — sweetness. Bhakti that softens the heart before it steadies the mind. Devotees answer in smaller words: a gentler inner voice, a slower breath, a daily anchor that holds on the days when everything else slips. Counting quietly protects that last one — the saved count makes it easy to return, even on low days.
And there is no gate in front of it. Radha naam asks for no initiation and no qualification; the greeting culture of Braj hands it to anyone who walks through. Begin with one mala and let the garland grow.
Radhe Radhe bolo, chale aayenge Bihari
Hladini Shakti
राधे राधे
Hello, goodbye, and everything between — Vrindavan's one word for all of it.
Her days on the calendar
Radha Ashtami Jap — Radhashtami to Meri Radhey Diwas
Radha Ashtami — written Radhashtami, kept as Radha Jayanti — falls on the eighth day of the bright half of Bhadrapada (August–September), fifteen days after Janmashtami. It is her appearance day and the biggest day of the Radha naam year: Barsana overflows, and devotees everywhere keep it with fasting and counted jap — a mala of 108, a full 1,008, or the opening 108 of a year-long sankalp begun on her day so the vow carries her blessing.
A newer observance is growing beside it: Meri Radhey Diwas, kept on 25 December by satsang communities as a day given wholly to her name. Whichever of her days you keep, count them here — every total is saved with its date, so next year you can see this year's count and go a little further.
राधाष्टमी
Radha Ashtami
Bhadrapada · Aug–Sep
मेरी राधे
Meri Radhey Diwas
25 December
How it works
How to Use the Radha Naam Japa Counter
No setup, no credit card. Three small steps, and the first garland of Radhe Radhe is already threading.
- 1
Walk in with a Radhe Radhe.
One Google tap in any browser and you are in — a free account that holds your Radha naam count, malas, and jap time. Nothing to install, nothing to configure.
- 2
Do the shringar of your screen.
Set Radhe Radhe as your mantra — or Shri Radhe, or Radha Krishna together — and add an image of Radha Rani if you like. Like shringar, you arrange it once, and it receives you the same way every session.
- 3
Thread the garland, tap by tap.
Each tap threads one naam onto the strand. At 108 the garland completes itself and a new one begins — or set a round of 28 for her names. However long you chant, the counter never drops a flower.
Questions
Radha Naam Japa Counter — Frequently Asked Questions
Straight answers to what people actually search for — daily counts, Radhe Radhe jap, the 28 names of Radha Rani, offline counting, and whether any of this needs an app.
How many times should you chant Radha naam daily?
Begin with Radha naam 108 times a day — one full mala. From there the practice grows naturally: 3, 5, or 16 malas daily, a fixed 1,008, or a longer vow built over months. The counter closes a mala at every 108 on its own and keeps your daily and lifetime totals, so whether you chant one mala or sixteen, the number stays exact and always saved.
Is there a Radha Naam Jap Counter app I need to download?
No download is needed. Where a Radha naam jap counter app would ask for an install from a store, this counter opens in the browser of any phone, tablet, or laptop — and behaves like an app if you add it to your home screen. One link, every device, always the latest version.
Is there a free Radha naam jap counter online?
Yes — this one. The core counter is a free Radha naam jap counter online with no ads on the chanting screen, no credit card, and no time limit. Sign-in is one tap with a free Google account, and it exists for one reason: so your count is never lost, even if you change phones. Every new account also unlocks all premium features free for 14 days.
Does the Radha jap counter work offline and save my count?
Yes, your count is safe. Every tap is saved on your device the moment it happens, and synced to your account when the connection returns — a dropped signal in the middle of jaap loses nothing. You do need a connection to open the page and sign in. So if you searched for a Radha naam jap counter offline: once your session is open, a weak network cannot harm the count.
Can I count Radhe Radhe jap and Radha Krishna jap here?
Both. Set the naam once and this becomes your Radhe Radhe jap counter — one tap per Radhe Radhe, a completed mala at 108. Set it to the joined name and it is a Radha Krishna jap counter the same way. Shri Radhe, Jai Shree Radhe, the Radha Gayatri — the flow never changes: one tap, one repetition.
What are the 28 names of Radha Rani?
A garland of 28 names of Shri Radha Rani, recited in Braj as one unbroken round — a practice that has spread across the world in recent years through Vrindavan satsangs, notably those of Premanand Maharaj ji. Count it here the way you would count a mala: one tap per name. With a custom mala size of 28 (a premium feature, free for your first 14 days) the counter completes a round exactly at the 28th name.
Radhe Radhe or Radha Radha — which is correct?
Both reach her. Radha is the name itself; Radhe is its calling form, which is why Braj greets with Radhe Radhe. Chant whichever rises naturally in you. The counter treats every repetition the same: one tap, one naam.
What happens if you chant Radhe Radhe 1 lakh or 1 crore times?
A counted vow of that size is called a sankalp, and Braj has always honoured it — Radha naam taken a lakh, even a crore of times, gathered over months and years. The tradition promises her grace. Devotees report something simpler: a quieter mind, and a practice that no longer depends on mood. And a vow that long needs honest counting — the lifetime total here holds it exactly, from the first Radhe to the last.
Which Radha mantra is best for daily chanting?
Start with Radhe Radhe — just two syllables, easy to carry on the breath; it is what Braj itself chants all day. For formal seated jap, many take up Om Shri Radhayai Namah, and the Radha Gayatri suits quiet morning meditation. But the honest answer is simple: the best Radha mantra is the one you will still be chanting a month from now. Choose one, set it on the counter once, and let the count grow.
Can you chant Radha naam without a guru or initiation?
Yes. Radha naam is given freely in Braj — it is the greeting on the street, not a secret behind a ceremony. Some lineages do give formal initiation for particular mantra sadhana, and a guru deepens any path. But no one needs permission to begin calling her name. Begin with Radhe Radhe today; when the pull grows, guidance finds the sincere heart.
Is a digital Radha jap counter as effective as a tulsi mala?
The mala is an instrument; the jap is the naam and the attention you give it. Saints across traditions have said the name counts however it is counted — on tulsi beads, on fingers, in writing. A digital Radha jap counter simply adds what beads cannot: malas that close themselves at 108, dated history, and a total that survives the device. If you love your tulsi mala, keep it — this keeps the score when the mala is not at hand.
Is using a jaap counter allowed in scripture?
Scripture asks for the naam and your attention — not for any particular tool. The tradition itself has counted on fingers, knotted cords, tulsi beads, and written notebooks; a counter simply joins that same family of honest tools. The saints of Vrindavan who carried Radha naam to millions teach one priority: chant, and keep chanting. Use whatever keeps the count true and the mind on her.
What is the best time for Radha naam jap?
Brahma muhurta — the still hours before sunrise — is the classical answer, and evening sandhya is its companion. But Braj gives a better one: in Vrindavan the name is said all day, because the greeting itself is Radhe Radhe. The simple rule: the best time is the one you will actually keep every day. A fixed time, a daily goal, and the count does the rest.
Still wondering? Open the counter and try it — it is free, and the first mala answers most questions.
Begin your Radha naam japa — one flower at a time.
Free Radha Naam Japa Counter. One tap per naam, a completed mala at every 108 — Radhe Radhe, Shri Radhe, or the 28 names of Radha Rani, in any browser, no credit card to begin. Premium features included free for 14 days.
NaamJapa's Radha Naam Japa Counter is free for Radhe Radhe jap, daily Radha naam jap count, and full 108-mala practice — on every device you already own.