This baseline study was designed to investigate the effects of regular dream-telling in mentally healthy elderly clinical research volunteers on six variables using standardized testing and self-report: life satisfaction, sleep duration, sleep quality, dream recall, dream tone, and dream epoch. 19 men and 42 women (non-institutionalized) between 61 and 87 years of age (median: 71 years) living in Switzerland, responded to two newspaper articles describing a project to study dream-telling in the aged. Current neuropsychiatric disorders according to DSM-IV were ruled out using clinical evaluation and standardized testing. Subjects were divided into two control groups and a study group which were matched for gender, age, and living situation (alone or with a partner). Those in the study group were given a weekly opportunity via telephone to tell dreams, while those in the control groups were contacted for the same amount of time. One control group was asked about sleep and dreaming in general without going into the details of dream contents, while the subjects in the other control group were only asked unspecifically about their well-being and sleep quality. All study participants were tested for intrapsychic boundaries (by use of the Boundary Questionnaire according to Hartmann), sleep disturbances (by use of the Sleep Disorders Questionnaire), and quality of life (by use of the WHO Quality of Life questionnaire) at the beginning and at the end of the six month trial period. The above-mentioned six variables showed no significant differences among the three groups. The present findings may thus serve as a baseline for future studies involving geriatric patients with mental disorders or elderly undergoing significant life-events, e.g., bereavement or retirement, using the method of regular dream-telling.