This 5-minute hand massage for dementia is one of the easiest calming activities you can offer in aged care, memory care, or one-to-one home support. It is low prep, gentle, and works well when someone is no longer interested in crafts, games, or longer group activities.
If you are looking for advanced dementia activities, sensory activities for dementia, or a simple calming activity for late stage dementia, this is a practical one to keep on hand. It gives caregivers and activity coordinators a quiet way to create comfort, connection, and sensory engagement without overcomplicating the session. Later-stage dementia guidance consistently recommends short, simple, sensory-based activities that focus on the person’s comfort rather than performance.

Why This Hand Massage Activity Works
A hand massage works well because it is simple, familiar, and does not ask too much from the person. There are no rules to remember and no pressure to finish anything. The person can sit comfortably, receive gentle touch, listen to your voice, and relax into the moment.
Massage and touch may also help reduce distress for some people living with dementia, although the evidence should be described carefully and not overstated. Alzheimer’s Society notes that there is a small amount of evidence suggesting massage may help with symptoms such as anxiety, agitation, and depression in dementia. For activity teams, that makes this a useful dementia sensory activity to try when someone needs a softer, calmer option.
Materials Needed
| Item | Why you need it | Simple suggestion |
| Gentle hand lotion | Helps hands glide smoothly | Use unscented lotion first if the person is sensitive to smell |
| Small towel | Protects clothing or bedding | A face washer or hand towel works well |
| Comfortable chair or bedside space | Keeps the person relaxed and supported | Choose a quiet corner with minimal noise |
| Clean warm hands | Makes the activity feel safe and pleasant | Rub your hands together before you begin |
| Optional soft music | Adds another calming sensory layer | Use familiar songs at a low volume |

Step-by-Step Guide:
Step 1. Set up a calm space. Sit beside the person in a quiet spot. Place a towel under their hands and make sure they are comfortable. If they enjoy music, put on something soft and familiar.
Step 2. Ask permission. Use a short, warm sentence such as, “Would you like me to gently rub your hands?” If the person looks unsure, pulls away, or seems tense, do not continue. Try again another time.
Step 3. Warm the lotion. Put a small amount of lotion into your hands and rub it between your palms so it does not feel cold.
Step 4. Start with one hand. Hold their hand gently and use slow strokes from the wrist toward the fingers. Keep your pressure light.
Step 5. Massage each finger. Give each finger a gentle squeeze from base to tip. Pause if the person seems tired or wants a break.
Step 6. Make small circles in the palm. Use your thumbs to make slow circular motions in the center of the palm and around the soft part below the thumb.
Step 7. Turn the hand over. Smooth across the back of the hand with small circles and slow strokes. Then repeat on the other hand if the person is still comfortable.
Step 8. Finish quietly. End by softly holding both hands for a moment and saying something simple such as, “That was lovely,” or, “Thank you.” A commonly described five-minute hand massage approach in dementia care also emphasizes asking permission, using gentle finger squeezes, circular motions, and ending with a calm moment of connection.
Best Tips for Activity Coordinators and Caregivers
Keep this activity short. For many people living with advanced dementia, five minutes is enough. Research on activity setup in severe dementia also suggests that shorter activities with more support are often more suitable than longer sessions.
Watch the person more than the clock. A relaxed hand, softer breathing, eye contact, or a calm facial expression are all signs that the activity is working. If the person turns away, stiffens, looks uncomfortable, or becomes restless, stop and move to a different calming activity.
If lotion is not suitable, adapt the activity. You can simply hold the person’s hand, use slow reassuring touch, or pair the session with familiar music. The goal is comfort and connection, not completing every step perfectly.
Extra Suggestions to Make It Easier
| Situation | Easy adaptation |
| The person does not like lotion | Skip the lotion and use light hand holding and gentle strokes |
| The person has limited attention | Do one hand only and keep the session under three minutes |
| The person responds well to music | Add a favourite song for extra sensory comfort |
| The person is in bed | Place a towel over the blanket and keep movements small and slow |
| You are doing one-to-one visits | Use this as a settling activity before reading aloud or conversation |
When Not to Use This Activity
Do not use hand massage if the person has broken skin, swelling, pain, infection, bruising, or a recent hand or wrist injury. If touch seems to increase distress, switch to another late stage dementia activity such as favourite music, looking through family photos, or sitting by a window together. NHS guidance also highlights music, objects to touch, and hand massage as suitable sensory-focused options in later-stage dementia.

Final Tip
If you need a 5-minute dementia activity that feels calm, personal, and easy to run, this is a strong one to add to your toolkit. It costs very little, works in aged care and home care, and can help create a quiet moment of connection when bigger activities feel like too much.
Recommendations for More Dementia-Friendly Activities
If your residents enjoyed this calming sensory activity, they might also like these other helpful resources from Memory Lane Therapy.
- Sing Along for Seniors: A simple way to bring familiar music, rhythm, and connection into your activity program.
- Memory Care Activity Book for Seniors Volume 1: A useful printable resource when you need easy memory care activities ready to go.
- Activities for Seniors With Limited Vision: Helpful for adapting sessions for residents who need low-vision friendly activity ideas.















