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Mobility Gentle ~2 min

Thumb Extension

Tuck the thumb into a loose fist, then extend it outward to train active thumb extension and base-joint control.

Equipment: No special equipment

Make a loose fist with the thumb tucked against the fingers.

Ready when you are

We'll guide you through 3 short steps — about 20 seconds of guided motion. Pause or stop anytime — nothing is uploaded.

Have ready: No special equipment

Contraindications & stop if…

When not to do this

  • Recent hand or wrist surgery without clinician clearance
  • Acute fracture before bone-healing milestones

Stop if

  • Sharp or increasing pain
  • New numbness, tingling, or pins-and-needles
  • Sudden swelling or color change in the hand
How does the hand feel right now?
No painWorst pain

Prefer a quick pacing gate before the timer? Use full guided session — it asks for pain, stiffness, and fatigue in a few taps first (education only, not clearance).

Full-screen steps and timer below — same exercise. For vertical reel mode, use the clapper icon next to Save at the top of the page.

Why it helps

Actively extending the thumb strengthens the muscles that open the hand wide and position the thumb for grasping.

What it should feel like

Light effort as the thumb lifts away from the fingers.

Target area

Thumb

Stop if you notice

  • Sharp or increasing pain
  • New numbness, tingling, or pins-and-needles
  • Sudden swelling or color change in the hand

Get clearance first if

  • Recent hand or wrist surgery without clinician clearance
  • Acute fracture before bone-healing milestones

More demos & readings (editorial catalog)

Extra YouTube, PDF, and hospital links gathered for this exercise cluster. The top embed above remains the oEmbed-verified pick when present; treat these as adjacent education — confirm fit with your clinician.

Typical catalog dose: 10 to 15 repetitions.

Precautions (catalog)

  • Use light effort first.
  • Avoid if the motion causes sharp thumb pain.
  • Hand strengthening exercises

    Virtual Hand Care · 2020-06-02

    Therapy putty exercises for thumb and finger strengthening.

    Useful as a progression from mobility into strengthening.

    Catalog ids: thumb_abduction
  • 5 Top Hand Occupational Therapy Exercises

    Excel Rehab & Sport · 2025-06-09

    Includes thumb abduction as a strengthening drill.

    Strength-oriented hand recovery.

    Catalog ids: thumb_abduction

    Open resource

  • Hand and Finger Exercises

    The Hand Society · 2025-08-24

    Demonstrates common hand and finger movements including thumb mobility patterns.

    Suitable for therapist-directed home exercise.

    Catalog ids: thumb_opposition

    Open resource

  • Hand exercises for people with arthritis

    Mayo Clinic · 2026-02-04

    Shows hand and thumb mobility drills for arthritis management.

    Useful for joint flexibility and pain-friendly motion.

    Catalog ids: thumb_active_rom

    Open resource

  • Hand physical therapy exercises to boost mobility and recovery

    BTE Technologies / TherapySpark · 2025-06-19

    Includes thumb flex and touch for opposition strength and coordination.

    Good for pinch and fine motor function.

    Catalog ids: thumb_opposition

    Open resource

  • other therapy exercises

    UHCW Hand Centre · 2025-08-18

    Includes thumb active range of movement exercises.

    Good for gentle thumb rehab.

    Catalog ids: thumb_active_rom

    Open resource

Catalog fact-check source list

Education sources

HandTherapy.app summarizes common home-program elements used in hand therapy and surgery recovery education. These links are for learning — they do not replace your clinician's instructions.

Explainer

How to do it well

Goal, setup, dose, and the things therapists most often have to repeat. This is education — not a replacement for your clinician's plan.

Before you start

  • Sit comfortably with your forearm supported.
  • Remove rings and tight jewelry.
  • Move only into comfortable range — never force.

Today's dose

Reps
5
Sets
2
Sessions / day
2
Rest
20s
Pain ceiling
3/10

Common mistakes

  • Rushing the movement instead of moving slowly and smoothly
  • Pushing into pain rather than a gentle stretch

Easier version

  • Do fewer reps and rest more often
  • Reduce the range of motion until it feels comfortable

Harder version

Only if your phase allows progression.

  • Add a gentle 5-second hold at the end of each rep

How did this feel?

One tap. Saved as a question for your next visit when relevant — never auto-shared.

Continue your rehab

What to do next — not a dead end

Suggestions use shared goals, tags, and difficulty — not your medical record. Always defer to your clinician’s plan after surgery or a flare.

Estimated time

~2 min this exercise

Add a second exercise below for a fuller block.

Equipment

None required — bodyweight / table surface only

Pain-level guard

Explainer ceiling: 3/10 — back off before you reach it.

When to stop

Sharp or increasing pain

New numbness, tingling, or pins-and-needles

Full stop rules ↑

Common mistake to watch

Rushing the movement instead of moving slowly and smoothly

More form cues ↓

Get clearance first if

  • Recent hand or wrist surgery without clinician clearance
  • Acute fracture before bone-healing milestones
In-session scaling: Easier — Do fewer reps and rest more often · Harder — Add a gentle 5-second hold at the end of each repFull explainer ↓