Skip to main content

A low-cost hand therapy kit

The best home setup is not "buy a grip trainer." It's a small kit that covers six jobs: move, glide, load, coordinate, sense, and measure.

Starter kit

Roughly $20–$40

What each item trains, the best phase to use it, and what to watch for.

ToolCostWhat it trains
Rubber bands
Very lowFinger extension, abduction, extensor balance
Soft sponge or foam ball
Very lowGentle grip, swelling pump, early squeeze tolerance
Therapy putty (or homemade dough)
LowGrip, pinch, finger isolation, thumb strength
Coins, buttons, beads
Very lowFine motor control, pinch, in-hand translation
Dry rice or beans in a bowl
Very lowSensory retraining, desensitization, search drills
Clothespins
Very lowPinch strength, thumb-index coordination, endurance
Towel or washcloth
Very lowFinger flexion/extension, wrist control, grip endurance
Paper clips
Very lowPrecision pinch, bilateral coordination, manipulation
Deck of cards
Very lowThumb motion, coordination, speed, sequencing
Mirror or phone camera
Very lowMirror therapy, motor imagery, visual feedback
Kitchen or luggage scale
LowApproximate grip or pinch force tracking
Smartphone camera
Very lowROM photos, time tests, form checks
Expanded kit

Roughly $50–$100

Useful additions when you've outgrown the starter set.

ToolCostWhat it trains
Graded therapy putty set (soft → medium)
MediumProgressive grip, pinch, finger isolation
Hand therapy web
MediumGrip, finger extension, wrist deviation, thumb motion
Adjustable hand gripper
MediumLate-stage strengthening
Finger exerciser with individual springs
MediumFinger isolation
Silicone scar sheets
MediumScar management
Compression glove or elastic wrap
LowEdema management
Cheap goniometer
LowJoint angle measurement
Metronome app
Very lowSpeed and rhythm for dexterity drills

Pair the kit with a regimen that fits your phase