We have observed that patients who suffer from hemiplegia after a cerebral stroke, tend to remove their clothes although it is not necessary to change them while they are in hospital. Not only does this activity make it difficult to manage the ward and carry out rehabilitation, but it also often becomes problematic for home care once the patient has been discharged from hospital. However, there have been no previous reports on this activity. In this study, we examined the characteristics pertaining to clothes removal in hemiplegic patients under home care. The subjects were chronic-stage, cerebral stroke hemiplegic patients hospitalized in the rehabilitation ward of this hospital since the first initial seizure. Once it was established that environmental factors, such as room temperature, were not the primary reason for the patients to try to remove their clothes, the patients were closely monitored and the circumstances under which they tried to remove their clothes (location, time and type of clothes removed) were recorded to examine the relationship among age, sex, side affected by paralysis, higher cortical function, motor paralysis and ADL. Thirty-five percent of the patients, mostly women, usually tried to remove their clothes and the tendency was for them to incompletely remove their tops without reason while they were confined to bed or sitting on the bed. This activity was also prevalent among patients with accompanying diminished intellectual function, left hemiplegia, and left unilateral spatial agnosia. The acquired level of ADL by FIM in the group in which this activity was observed was low, except regarding meals. Thus, it was inferred that in stroke hemiplegic patients being taken care of at home the removal of clothes was related to a diminished intellectual function or ADL, which suggested the importance of family guidance based on observations of the patient's behavior in the ward. Targeting a greater number of subjects, we would like to conduct further studies on home-care measures to deal with this activity.