Why Hand Strength Matters More Than You Think
Many parents focus on pencil grip when their child struggles with writing. But grip is often a symptom, not the root cause. Hand strength — the ability to generate and sustain force through the muscles of the hand, wrist, and forearm — is the foundation of almost every fine motor skill.
Without adequate hand strength, children fatigue quickly when writing, struggle with scissors, have difficulty fastening buttons, and find many classroom tasks genuinely tiring rather than easy.
Signs Your Child May Have Weak Hand Strength
- Pressing very lightly with a pencil — letters are pale and hard to read
- Or pressing extremely hard — the pencil tears the paper or breaks frequently
- Tiring quickly during writing tasks or avoiding them altogether
- Difficulty opening containers, jars, or bottles independently
- Struggling with scissors — cutting is effortful or inaccurate
- Messy or slow handwriting that does not match the child’s intelligence
- Avoiding craft activities that other children enjoy
Fun Hand Strengthening Activities
The best hand strengthening activities do not feel like exercises — they feel like play. Here are activities I recommend regularly in clinic and as part of home programmes.
Therapy Putty and Play Dough
Squeezing, rolling, pinching, and pulling putty or play dough is one of the most effective ways to build hand strength across all muscle groups. Therapy putty comes in different resistances — start with a softer grade and progress over time. At home, regular play dough works beautifully. Make it a daily activity rather than an occasional one.
Try these putty challenges: hide small beads inside the putty for the child to find by squeezing; roll long "snakes" and coil them into shapes; press small toys into flattened putty to create prints.
Clothespeg Activities
Squeezing a clothespeg is a surprisingly effective resistance exercise. Hang pictures on a washing line using pegs. Sort cards by colour and clip them to a rail. Use pegs to attach crepe paper to a fence and create a weaving activity. This builds the pincer muscles directly involved in pencil grip.
Spray Bottles and Squeezy Toys
Fill a spray bottle with water and let your child water plants, clean windows, or target a chalk drawing on the pavement. Squeezing a spray bottle requires sustained hand strength across the full hand.
Tearing, Scrunching, and Cutting Paper
Tearing paper along straight lines and curves is a great bilateral coordination and strength activity. Scrunch newspaper into tight balls — make it a competition. Progress to cutting with scissors, starting with thick card before moving to thinner paper.
Carrying and Lifting
Everyday tasks build strength too. Let your child carry their own bag, help carry groceries, or move books from one shelf to another. Carrying tasks build grip endurance in a functional, meaningful way.
Using Vertical Surfaces
Drawing or writing on a vertical surface — like a whiteboard, an easel, or paper taped to a wall — is one of the most effective ways to simultaneously build hand strength, wrist extension, and shoulder stability. The wrist naturally extends in this position, which promotes a more efficient pencil grip.
Let your child draw, paint, or write their spelling words on a vertical surface several times a week. It feels different and often more fun than sitting at a desk.
Progression and Consistency
Hand strength improves gradually with consistent practice. Little and often is more effective than long, infrequent sessions. Aim for 10 to 15 minutes of hand-focused activities daily, embedded into play rather than presented as a chore.
If your child’s difficulties are significant, an occupational therapist can assess their hand strength using standardised tools, identify specific muscle weaknesses, and design a targeted programme. In Malta, we often combine clinic-based therapy with a structured home programme to maximise progress between sessions.
When to Seek OT Support
If your child is significantly behind peers in writing, self-care tasks, or fine motor skills — or if teachers are raising concerns — an OT assessment can provide clarity and a clear way forward. Early support makes a real difference.
If you’re concerned about your child’s development, contact us at +356 99872936 or visit wonderkids.mt to book an assessment.