Home Practice • Daily Exercises

5-Minute Daily Speech Exercises You Can Do at Home

• 5 min read

You don't need an hour a day to see improvement. Five focused minutes of speech practice, done consistently, can make a real difference in clarity, loudness, and confidence.

Why 5 minutes works

Research shows that short, frequent practice sessions are more effective than occasional long ones. Your brain and muscles respond better to daily repetition. The key is consistency — five minutes every day beats thirty minutes once a week.

This routine is designed for people with dysarthria, Parkinson's, or anyone recovering from stroke who wants to maintain or improve their speech at home.

The 5-minute routine

Do these exercises in order. You can adjust the time on each as you get comfortable.

Minute 1: Wake up your breath

Strong speech starts with strong breath support.

Why it helps: This activates your diaphragm and gets air flowing steadily — the foundation for louder, clearer speech.

Minute 2: Loud and sustained vowels

Practice projecting your voice without straining.

Why it helps: Builds vocal strength and helps you find your "loud" voice. Many people with Parkinson's or dysarthria speak softer than they realise.

Minute 3: Exaggerated consonants

Crisp consonants make the difference between being understood and being asked to repeat yourself.

Why it helps: Over-articulation in practice leads to clearer articulation in conversation.

Minute 4: Real phrases you use

Practice sentences you actually say in daily life.

Examples:

Why it helps: Practicing real phrases means the improvement transfers directly to your daily conversations.

Minute 5: Check your progress

End with a quick self-assessment.

Why it helps: Feedback — whether from yourself, a family member, or an app — helps you know if your practice is working.

Tips for sticking with it

When to do more

Five minutes is a starting point. If you're preparing for an important call or appointment, you might want to do a quick pre-call warmup on top of your daily routine.

If you're working with a speech-language therapist, share your home practice routine with them. They can suggest adjustments based on your specific needs.