Hand massage: 5 minutes for typing-tired hands

Our hands type, scroll and grip all day – and hardly ever get attention. A hand massage takes five minutes, needs no setup, and is the easiest way to introduce someone to massage. It's also ideal self-care between meetings.

The 5-minute routine (per hand)

  1. Warm-up (30 sec): enclose the hand between both of yours and stroke firmly from fingers to wrist.
  2. Palm (90 sec): support the hand with your fingers and work the palm with both thumbs – slow circles from the wrist to the finger bases. The ball of the thumb deserves extra time.
  3. Fingers (90 sec): each finger from base to tip with gentle pressure and a light pull; small circles on the joints.
  4. Back of the hand & wrist (60 sec): soft thumb strokes between the tendons, careful circles around the wrist.
  5. Forearm bonus (60 sec): typing tension actually lives here – knead the top of the forearm from elbow toward the wrist.

Self-massage version

Everything above works one-handed on yourself at the desk – no oil needed. Two minutes per hand noticeably relaxes thumb and forearm after long typing or phone sessions. More desk-friendly routines: self-massage guide.

💡 Hands are the perfect warm-up act of a couples massage – or the finale of a foot massage session for full-body lightness.

Hands, forearms & desk routines on video

Short, effective routines for busy hands – plus everything else from neck to feet in the full course.

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FAQ

Can hand massage help with 'mouse arm'?

It eases the muscular side of overuse – forearm kneading especially. Persistent pain, tingling or weakness needs medical evaluation, as nerves may be involved.

With oil or without?

Self-massage at the desk: without. Partner routine: a drop of cream or oil makes palm work smoother.

Numb fingers at night?

That points toward nerve compression rather than simple muscle fatigue – have it checked instead of massaging harder.