Exercises & Lessons

Chair Exercises for Seniors: A Gentle Seated Set

A short, gentle seated set of chair exercises for seniors you can do by your chair. Slow, safe movements to ease morning stiffness.

5-10 minutes· beginner
seniorschair exercisesseated movementstiffnessgentle movementmobility

The lesson

About 5-10 minutes. Move slowly, do less than you can, and stay well below any pain. Rest whenever you need to.

  1. 1

    Settle and feel the chair. Sit toward the front of a stable chair with both feet flat on the floor. Feel where you press into the seat and where your feet press into the ground. Let your breath be quiet and easy. Keep one hand resting on the chair if that feels steadier.

  2. 2

    Slow ankle and foot wakening. Lift the toes of one foot while the heel stays down, then lower them and lift the heel instead. Move slowly between the two, smaller than feels necessary. Do a few, then change feet. Notice how the lower leg joins in.

  3. 3

    Easy knee floats. Let one foot lift a couple of inches off the floor, pause, and set it down with care. Then the other. Keep the lifts low and unhurried. There is nothing to reach for, only the feeling of the hip and knee taking part.

  4. 4

    Gentle shoulder rolls. Let both shoulders drift up toward the ears a little, then roll them back and down in a slow, small circle. Repeat a few times, then reverse. Let the breath stay loose throughout.

  5. 5

    Soft spine turn. With both hands resting in your lap, let your head and chest turn slowly toward one side as far as feels comfortable, then return to center and turn the other way. Keep it small and pause if anything pulls.

  6. 6

    Rest and notice. Sit quietly for a few breaths with both feet on the floor. Notice anything that feels a little freer or warmer than when you began. That noticing is part of the practice.

If sitting down for long stretches leaves you feeling stiff and slow to get going, this set of chair exercises for seniors gives you a gentle, seated place to start. You do not need to get on the floor, change clothes, or push through discomfort. You only need a sturdy chair and a few quiet minutes. The movements below are slow and small on purpose, drawing on the same gentle-movement principles as the Feldenkrais Method® and other somatic approaches, which work by helping the body rediscover easy range rather than forcing it.

Stiffness with age is very common. Roughly one in four adults over 65 reports difficulty with everyday movement such as bending, reaching, or rising from a chair, according to figures cited by the CDC. The encouraging part is that joints tend to respond to unhurried, regular use. A few minutes of attentive movement can remind the hips, spine, and shoulders that they still have room to move.

How to use these chair exercises for seniors

Set up near your favorite chair so the set is always within reach. Sit toward the front of a stable chair, both feet flat on the floor, and keep one hand resting on the seat or armrest for steadiness. There is no target to hit and no count to finish. The aim is to move slowly enough that you can feel each part of the motion. If you ever feel dizzy or short of breath, stop and rest, and let someone know if it continues.

Move in a range that feels easy. Smaller and slower almost always teaches the body more than bigger and faster. When a movement feels smooth, you can gently explore a touch more, always staying well below anything that pulls or aches.

Why gentle seated movement eases stiffness

When we sit still for hours, the muscles around the joints quiet down and the tissues lose a little of their glide. Moving a joint slowly through a comfortable arc brings warmth and circulation back to the area and gives the nervous system fresh information about where the body is. Over time, that steady, gentle input is part of what helps movement feel less effortful. You can read more about this approach in our Feldypedia guide to the Feldenkrais Method.

This is also the idea behind the Feldy program, where each short lesson guides the body through slow, curious movement that builds ease without strain. If stiffness after 60 is something you live with day to day, the program for staying mobile after 60 goes further than a single set of seated movements.

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Listening as you move

The most useful skill in this whole set is not flexibility, it is attention. As you do each movement, notice which side feels freer, where the breath wants to hold, and what shifts after you rest. None of this is about doing it the one true way. It is about noticing your own options and giving your body friendly, low-pressure practice. If you would like a gentle floor or standing companion to this seated set, our somatic exercises for beginners cover the same slow, attentive style.

Keep one hand on the chair, stay below any pain, and treat the whole thing as an unhurried check-in with yourself. Stiffness rarely lifts all at once, but many people notice that a daily few minutes makes getting up and moving feel a little kinder.

FAQ about chair exercises for seniors

Are chair exercises for seniors safe to do alone? For most people, gentle seated movement is a safe place to begin. Keep one hand on a stable chair, move within a comfortable range, and stop if you feel dizzy or short of breath. If you have balance, heart, or joint conditions, check with a doctor or physical therapist first.

How often should I do these chair exercises? A short daily round works better than a long session once a week. Five to ten minutes most days is plenty for many people. Let your body, not the clock, set the pace, and rest whenever you need to.

What if a movement causes pain? Pain is a signal to make the movement smaller, slower, or to skip it for now. These exercises should feel easy. If a particular movement reliably brings pain, leave it out and ask a professional about what suits you.

Can I do these if I use a walker or have trouble standing? Yes. Seated movement is often a good fit when standing is tiring or unsteady. Use a chair with arms for extra support, and keep everything within easy reach so you do not have to stand mid-session.

Will chair exercises help with morning stiffness? Many older adults find that gentle movement eases the stiffness that builds up overnight or after sitting. It is not a cure for any condition, but moving the joints slowly through a comfortable range often helps them feel looser. Persistent stiffness is worth discussing with a doctor.

Do I need any equipment? Only a sturdy chair that does not roll or tip. A firm dining chair is ideal. Keep it somewhere handy so the set is always ready when you are.

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