A free 10-minute at-home routine that aligns with NHS Simple Lymphatic Drainage (SLD) guidance — the version we teach lymphoedema patients between clinic sessions. Three components: deep diaphragmatic breathing, very light skin-stretching toward node clusters, and muscle-pump moves like ankle pumps and shoulder rolls. Useful for diagnosed lymphoedema, post-op recovery, post-flight swelling, and end-of-day desk-leg puffiness. If you’re a healthy active adult, you probably don’t need it. Either way, it’s nothing like the aggressive scrubbing routines on TikTok.
I’ve been registered with MLDUK and treating clinical lymphoedema for around 15 years. The number-one question I get from new patients on the phone, just before they book, is some version of “is there something I can do at home?” The answer’s yes. There’s a 10-minute routine I teach almost every patient — Simple Lymphatic Drainage, often shortened to SLD — and it’s the same protocol that NHS lymphoedema clinics, the Royal Marsden, Worcestershire Acute Hospitals, and the British Lymphology Society publish in their patient leaflets. It looks nothing like the vigorous scrubbing-and-cupping videos on Instagram. It’s slow. It’s feather-light. It’s built around three things: breath, gentle skin direction, and muscle pump. This piece is the version I’d hand a patient on day one, expanded enough that you can actually run with it at home tonight.
Before you start — does this routine actually apply to you?
Worth being clear about who genuinely benefits, because most “lymphatic drainage” articles online skip this bit and pretend everyone needs the routine. They don’t.
- You have diagnosed lymphoedema on a CDT plan
- Post-op recovery between MLD sessions
- Situational puffiness (flight, desk, salt, PMS)
- Healthy active adult — your lymph already works
- Chasing a “detox” — liver + kidneys handle that
- Hoping for weight loss — moves water, not fat
The three things that actually move lymph
You’ll do the routine better if you understand what each section is for. Your lymphatic system has no central pump. It depends on three external drivers, and the routine is built around all three.
The thoraco-abdominal pump
Your diaphragm is the engine for the whole lower body. When you breathe deeply, the rise and fall of the diaphragm changes pressure inside the chest cavity, which directly compresses and releases the thoracic duct — the main lymph drainage point that empties into the venous system near the left collarbone. Dr Jack Shields demonstrated this on lymphangiogram imaging back in 1979, and the mechanism has held up since. This is why every NHS SLD leaflet starts with breathing.
The muscle pump
Lymph vessels run alongside your blood vessels, and every time you contract a surrounding muscle, you squeeze them and push fluid forward. This is why walking is the single most evidence-backed lymphatic activity. Your calf muscles are sometimes called the “second heart” for exactly this reason — every step pushes lymph and venous blood up out of the lower legs.
Skin-stretching toward nodes
The superficial lymph capillaries sit just under your skin and have tiny one-way valves that open with very light skin traction. Stretching the skin in the direction of the next lymph node cluster opens those valves and encourages flow. The pressure is barely there — feather-light. Direction is everything.
The 10-minute home routine — full step-by-step
This is the clinic-aligned sequence. Total time, 10 minutes. Equipment, none. Ideally lying down or sitting comfortably, on bare skin, no oils or creams.
Deep diaphragmatic breathing
Lie on your back with knees bent, or sit upright. Hands resting on your lower ribs.
Slow inhale through the nose for a count of 4 — feel your belly and lower ribs expand into your hands. Hold for 2. Slow exhale through the mouth for a count of 6.
8 to 10 cycles.
Neck + clavicle clearing
Soft fingertips on either side of the neck, just below the jaw line.
Light skin-stretch downward toward the collarbone — 10 reps each side. The pressure should be skin-level only.
Then, find the small hollows just above each collarbone (the supraclavicular fossa). With your index and middle finger, very small circular stretches in those hollows — 10 each side.
Axilla (armpit) activation
Right hand into left armpit. Gentle pump-and-release motion — soft press, soft release — 10 times. Repeat on the other side.
Then shoulder rolls — 10 forward, 10 backward.
Trunk + abdomen
Flat hand on the lower abdomen, just below the navel. Light circular skin-stretch in a clockwise direction — 10 circles. (Clockwise is deliberate; it follows the colon and the natural lymph drainage pattern through the abdomen.)
Then standing or sitting tall, side bends — one arm overhead, lean gently to the opposite side — 5 to each side.
Leg pumps + ankle circles
Seated or lying. Ankle pumps — flex toes up toward shin, point down — 15 each foot.
Ankle circles — 10 clockwise, 10 counter-clockwise, each foot.
If you can stand: calf raises, slow up, slow down — 15 reps.
Directional skin-stretch (legs)
Both hands flat on the top of the right thigh. Very light upward skin-stretch toward the groin — imagine smoothing a sheet upward toward your hip — 10 reps. Use only the weight of your hands; no real downward pressure.
Then both hands on the lower leg. Same gentle upward skin-stretch, this time toward the back of the knee (the popliteal nodes) — 10 reps.
Repeat on the left leg. Always upward. Always toward the next node cluster.
Closing breath
Back to deep diaphragmatic breathing — 8 to 10 cycles. This reinforces the thoracic pump and helps everything you’ve just shifted carry through.
Optional: a glass of water afterwards. Lymph fluid is mostly water and the system runs better when you’re hydrated.
That’s the full routine. Honestly, the most common feedback I get when I first run patients through it in clinic is “is anything actually happening?” — because the pressure feels like nothing. That’s correct. If you can feel firm pressure, you’ve gone too deep.
Common mistakes — the things I see daily
- Pressing too hard. SLD is a skin-stretch technique, not a deep-tissue massage. If your skin reddens, you’re now massaging muscle and connective tissue. Counter-productive — you can flatten the delicate lymph capillaries you’re trying to support.
- Wrong direction. Always toward the unaffected, already-cleared node cluster. Working away from them just sloshes fluid back the wrong way.
- Skipping the breath. The breathing sets the pressure gradient that the rest of the routine drains into. Skip it and you’ve taken the engine out.
- Once-and-done. SLD is a daily maintenance habit. Most patients with general puffiness notice the routine’s effect at the 2- to 3-week mark, not after a single attempt.
- Oil or cream. Real SLD is on bare skin. Oil makes the hand slip past the skin instead of stretching it. The traction is the whole mechanism.
- Copying TikTok. The aggressive deep-tissue routines going viral aren’t lymphatic drainage. They’re muscle-release massages or aesthetic “sculpting” massages rebranded with a more searchable label. Real MLD and SLD look like nothing is happening.
How long until you’ll notice anything?
Depends entirely on what you’re using it for.
Lymphoedema patients on CDT
Post-op patients
General puffiness
Stop without guilt
What this routine does NOT replace
- A GP visit for new persistent swelling. Always step one.
- Compression sleeves or bandaging if you’re under lymphoedema care. Compression is the load-bearing component of treatment, not the SLD.
- Real MLD by an MLDUK-registered therapist for active disease. Self-care maintains. Clinic sessions treat.
- A daily walk. The 10-minute routine complements movement; it doesn’t substitute for it.
- The boring foundations — water, sleep, lower salt intake. UK average salt is around 8.4g a day; the NHS target is under 6g. Cutting salt usually does more for end-of-day puffiness than any massage.
Where it fits in your day
First thing in the morning before dressing and putting on compression, or evening to decongest after a static day.
A 30-minute walk most days; 6 to 8 hours of sleep; 1.5 to 2 litres of water; less salt.
2 to 3 minutes of dry body-brushing before a shower (modest skin and superficial circulation benefit, not deep lymph effect); 5 minutes on a mini-trampoline if you own one (the lymph benefit is mostly because it’s exercise, but it’s effective movement so do it).
Frequently Asked Questions
10 minutes a day. 14 days. Then decide.
Honest version: most people reading this don’t need this routine. The healthy human lymphatic system runs itself perfectly well on the back of a daily walk, decent sleep, water, and a low-salt diet. But if you have lymphoedema, you’re recovering from surgery, you’ve come off a long flight, or you simply want the legitimate evidence-aligned alternative to a £200 spa “lymphatic drainage” facial, the 10 minutes above is the version I teach in clinic. Try it daily for 14 days. If you’ve noticed nothing by the end of the fortnight, it isn’t a problem you needed to solve, and you can drop it without ceremony. If you have noticed a difference, your body has just told you what it needed.
