Your shoe is critical to your stride—here’s how to get it right.
Zero-drop, carbon fiber plates, minimalist or maximalist—runners love to discuss and debate the latest shoe types and features.
Far fewer long-run chats and online forums are dedicated to discussing running shoe size. But how well a shoe matches the length, width, and shape of your feet may actually matter as much as, if not more than, the cushioning that goes underneath them, says Geoffrey Gray, D.P.T., founder and director of research at Heeluxe.
Gray’s company has tested hundreds of runners and now works with about 50 footwear brands, using research to help them improve their products. The better a shoe fits, the more comfortable runners will feel wearing it, he says. Not only does this make your miles more pleasant, some research suggests comfort plays a role in injury risk.
“From a kinetic chain standpoint, your foot is the first point of contact with the ground; your whole skeletal structure is supported by your feet,” says Allison Bowersock, Ph.D., an exercise physiologist and co-owner of RunAbout Sports, a shoe store in Roanoke, Virginia. Here is how to find a shoe that fits—and what can go wrong when you wear one that doesn’t.
How to Find a Running Shoe That Fits
Conventional wisdom holds that your running shoes should be about a size bigger than your dress or casual size. There’s a grain of truth to that—increased blood flow and swelling during and after exercise do make your feet expand, so your running shoes tend to be larger. However, due to sizing variations in all types of shoes, there are too many variables to know exactly how the numbers will align, says Kevin Vincent, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor at the University of Florida and director of the UF Running Medicine Clinic.
So, start with some hard data: If you haven’t had your feet measured since your parents dragged you for school shoes, go for a fitting. The length and width of your feet change due to factors like aging, injuries, and pregnancy.
“The size you wore when you’re 18 might not be the same size you wear when you’re 42, just like you’re probably not wearing the same size pants,” Gray says. “And that’s okay. But we need to get those measurements to know how to change it.” In fact, he recommends getting measured once a year.
Ideally, you’d have this done at a local running-shoe store. People who’ve bought their shoes from a brick-and-mortar establishment seem less prone to poor fit than those who shop online, Gray says.
For one thing, trained salespeople have a feel for which brands run large or small and in which ways. Plus, trying on the shoe is the only way for you to know how comfortable it is. Go later in the day or after a run, when your feet are more swollen, Vincent says.
At RunAbout Sports, the fitting process starts with measuring both feet while you’re standing up. That’s important, because there can be as much as full size-worth of difference between your right and left, Bowersock says. You’ll want a shoe that fits the bigger foot. (You can always change the lacing or add an extra sock on the smaller foot, Vincent says—or, if it’s due to a foot problem like a bunion you haven’t had treatment for, consult with a podiatrist.)
Ideally, a salesperson will bring you several different options. To assess size and fit as you try them on:
- Take the insert out of the shoe and stand on it. The size and shape should match the size and shape of your foot, Vincent says. Your toes shouldn’t spill over the front or sides, and the tip should come to a point roughly where your toes narrow.
- Put the insert back in and put the shoes on. Lace them tightly enough to lock the shoe over your navicular bone—the bony bump over the high point of your arch—or instep, Gray says, but not so tightly that you constrict nerves and blood vessels. You should be able to slide a finger between the knot and your shoe, Vincent says.
- Stand up and check the feel and fit. You want about a thumbnail’s worth of width between your longest toe and the front of the shoe, keeping in mind that your longest toe may be your second metatarsal (the heads of the long toe bones) and not your big toe. As for width, check that there’s little to no pressure on your pinky toe and only slight pressure on your big toe—slightly looser than the snugness of a watch strap on your wrist, Gray says,
- Walk—and, preferably, run. Check that your heel doesn’t slip and that nothing pinches or rubs uncomfortably against your ankle. Also, check the fabric of the upper—if it gathers you might need a snugger fit, and if it bulges or stretches, you might need to go bigger, Bowersock says.
- Repeat until things feel just right. Don’t settle for something cramped thinking you’ll break them in; they should fit properly right from the start, Vincent says. While some parts of the shoe—including the midsole and cushioning—may change for the better with mild wear, that doesn’t affect the sizing or fit, Gray says.
There are exceptions to these rules. For instance, the reason you need extra room in the toes is because most shoes are designed to flex when you run, especially uphill—and that motion brings your toes closer to the end of the shoe. But models with carbon-fiber plates lack this motion, so they can fit more snugly.
“If you’re buying a shoe with different features than what you might be used to—like going from like a trail-running shoe to a major backpacking shoe, or a normal racing flat to a carbon fiber-equipped racing flat—your best size might be different,” Gray says.
Don’t stress if your speciality shop lacks advanced technology, such as foot scanners or fit systems. While they can offer a good baseline for understanding your feet and help standardize the fit process across stores, they’re not yet a substitute for a good shoe-fitter and shouldn’t supersede your experience of how a shoe feels, Gray says.
Instead, worry about one often overlooked detail: your socks. Thick fabric can require you go up as much as a full shoe size to accommodate, Gray says. Try to stick to the same type of socks for each run, and wear them to the store for your fitting. If weather doesn’t permit total consistency—say, you want thicker socks to survive a frigid winter—you might need different size shoe for each season. “It makes a world of difference,” Gray says.
What Happens When You Wear the Wrong Size Running Shoes?
Wear shoes that are too short, and your toes can butt up against the front. This contributes to the bane of runners’ existence, black and missing toenails, says Vincent.
This contact can also damage toe ligaments and the metatarsals, leading to deformities like hammer toes, he says. Over time, you can also develop Freiberg’s infraction—a stress fracture of the second metatarsal—from repeated impact.
Plus, squeezing your toes together too tightly forces the muscles of your foot out of alignment, Gray says. As a result, you might feel foot fatigue and develop pain in your arches or bunions.
At the front of your ankle, there’s a bundle of nerves, tendons, and blood vessels, Vincent says. They’re secured by a tight band of tissue, but shoes that fit too snugly can compress them, causing pain on the top of your foot or numbness and tingling throughout them.
Going too big, meanwhile, means your foot shifts around in your shoe. If a shoe doesn’t lock down over your navicular bone, your foot can move back and forth with each step. The shear stress of shifting shoes and bunching socks against skin creates blisters, Vincent says. Plus, you can also wind up with bruised toes and toenails this way as your foot bangs into the front of the shoe with each slide, Gray says.
Finally, if you’re wearing stability shoes that have a rigid post, getting the sizing wrong in either direction can alter where it falls on your instep. You may inadvertently put pressure on your plantar nerves, which run across the bottom of your feet, Vincent says. Constriction there can cause numbness, tingling, and pain on the bottom of your foot that can mimic conditions like plantar fasciitis.
How Often Do Runners Wear the Wrong Size Shoe—And Why?
About three-fourths of the people Gray’s lab tests are wearing the wrong size shoe, mostly too small—by anywhere from a half-size to two sizes. Bowersock, too, frequently sees new customers wearing ill-fitting kicks. “Either they’ve become accustomed to the improper size or they’ve been uncomfortable for a while and never could really identify the source of the issue,” she says.
It’s not that runners are dim or masochistic—just that sizing is confusing. Shoes work more like running apparel than bras; there’s no standard guideline for what sizing numbers mean, Gray says. So a size 10 in a Brooks Adrenaline GTS could be very different from a size 10 Nike Pegasus. What’s worse, running shoe sizes aren’t even always consistent within brands, meaning one model fits differently than another even if they come in the same kind of box.
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Sizes can shift, too, when a company releases a new version of shoe. “Sometimes it doesn’t fit the same because the material changes or how they did the construction of the forefoot changes—and every time they change the forefoot, you can change the length of the shoe,” Vincent says.
And then there’s the question of width. Generally speaking, humans’ feet have stayed the same length but grown wider with time, Gray says. But, the dimensions of the lasts—mechanical forms on which shoe size and shape are based—haven’t kept pace. What’s more, women tend to have a greater differential in width between their heels and their forefoot, but are often squeezed into shoes that narrow near the toes for aesthetic reasons, Vincent says.
In some cases, shoes in wider widths—marked with letter from D onward for women, or E onward for men—have the same size midsole but merely add extra fabric. However, other companies add extra room to the footbed to accommodate feet that are thicker front to back, Vincent says.
Meanwhile, a few brands—including Altra, Topo, and Xero—have wider toe-boxes even in regular widths, he points out. That’s often better for conditions like bunions, where your forefoot needs more space, but your heel is closer to the standard size. That way, your heel won’t slip.
Given all these variables, finding the right size in your ideal brand and model can take some trial and fine-tuning. You might have to repeat the process each time you change shoes or your preferred model gets an update.
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