Arch Support Insoles for Plantar Fasciitis and Flat Feet
£9.99£11.99 (-17%)inc VAT
Key Features & Benefits at a Glance
- Expertly Engineered for Targeted Pain Relief: Specifically crafted for individuals with flat feet and plantar fasciitis, these arch support insoles deliver focused relief by addressing the underlying causes of foot and heel pain. They provide a structured foundation that helps reduce discomfort from the first step, supporting your path to improved daily comfort.
- Orthotic Alignment for Improved Biomechanics: Experience comprehensive orthotic arch and deep heel cup support that encourages proper alignment of your feet and lower limbs. This design helps correct imbalances like overpronation and supination, distributing pressure more evenly with each step. By fostering optimal alignment, you can minimize strain on vulnerable areas and enhance natural foot function throughout your activities.
- Holistic Support for Common Foot Conditions: Rely on these insoles to assist in managing, alleviating, and preventing a variety of foot and lower limb issues. They offer consistent, therapeutic support for conditions such as plantar fasciitis, heel spurs, arthritis, metatarsalgia, Morton’s neuroma, bunions, blisters, sesamoiditis, Achilles tendonitis, ankle sprains, and shin splints, contributing to overall foot health.
- Advanced Shock Absorption for Lasting Comfort: Protect your feet from the repetitive impacts of daily life with insoles designed to absorb shock and distribute weight uniformly across the sole. This reduces high-pressure points and discomfort, making them an essential choice for those who stand for long periods on hard surfaces or experience tired, aching legs and feet. The result is a stable, cushioned foundation that helps combat fatigue and maintain comfort.
- Antibacterial Material for Enhanced Freshness: Crafted from Active Carbon Fibre, these insoles naturally inhibit bacterial growth, effectively neutralise odours, and promote a drier, fresher feeling throughout the day. This material choice ensures that comfort extends beyond support to include a more pleasant in-shoe environment.
- Reinforced Stability for Active Pursuits: Benefit from added support and stability that makes these insoles ideal for runners and athletes. They provide extra protection during high-impact activities like running or jumping, helping to safeguard your feet and ankles while promoting confident movement.
- Customisable Fit for Versatile Use: Designed to suit both men and women, the insoles are available in sizes 7-11 and 3-7. With a simple trim-to-fit feature, you can easily adapt them to any enclosed footwear—from trainers and boots to casual shoes—ensuring the support elements are perfectly positioned for maximum effect.
- Risk-Free Trial with a Satisfaction Guarantee: Purchase with assurance thanks to a 30-day money-back guarantee. This allows you to experience the transformative comfort and support of these insoles firsthand, providing peace of mind as you invest in your foot health.
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Orthotic Arch Support Insoles for Plantar Fasciitis, Flat Feet, and Everyday Foot Comfort
Sharp heel pain when you first get out of bed can make the day feel harder before it has properly started. For some people, the pain sits right under the heel, often slightly towards the inner side where the strong band under the arch begins. For others, the main problem is less one sharp spot and more a steady build-up of arch ache, sore soles, and feet that feel increasingly overworked by evening.
You might notice it after long periods of standing, walking on pavement, using stairs, driving, or simply spending too much time on your feet. The foot may feel manageable at first, then gradually less comfortable and less able to keep doing the same job. That kind of problem is easy to underestimate at the start because it often comes and goes. A quieter day may help. Softer shoes may help briefly. But once the same daily demands return, the soreness often returns with them.
Two of the most common reasons for this are plantar heel pain and arches that drop too far or tire too easily under body weight. They are not exactly the same thing, but they often overlap. The strong band under the foot, called the plantar fascia, helps support the arch and cope with force every time you stand or walk. If the arch keeps dropping and the heel is not well controlled, that tissue and the structures around it can end up doing more work than they can comfortably manage. If the heel is already sore, you may also start moving a little differently without realising it, which can leave the rest of the foot and ankle working harder as well.
A very familiar sequence is this: the first few steps are the worst, then things ease once you have been moving for a short while, and later the discomfort starts to build again after more standing, walking, or time on hard ground. Some people mainly feel that as sharp heel pain when the foot first takes weight. Others notice more of a dragging ache through the arch, tired ankles, or a general sense that the feet are having to work too hard just to get through ordinary daily tasks.
These orthotic arch support insoles are designed for exactly that sort of day-to-day strain. They support the arch, help keep the heel steadier inside the shoe, spread pressure more evenly through the foot, and add cushioning to soften repeated impact from hard indoor floors, concrete, and pavement. That matters because sore feet are rarely just a problem of not having enough softness under them. More often, the trouble is that sensitive tissues are being pulled, loaded, or jolted in the same way over and over again. A more supportive insole can change that enough to make walking, standing, and longer spells on your feet easier to manage.
- Structured orthotic insoles designed to support the arch, steady the heel, and cushion everyday walking and standing.
- Mainly suited to adults with plantar heel pain, low or tired arches, general foot fatigue, or repeated discomfort on hard floors.
- Helpful when the first few steps after rest feel sharp under the heel, or when the arches and soles feel increasingly overworked as the day goes on.
- Contoured arch support gives the middle of the foot a firmer base, so the tissues under the arch do not have to do all of the support work on their own.
- A deep heel cup helps the back of the foot feel more stable and centred inside the shoe.
- Cushioning layers help soften repeated impact from concrete, pavement, tile, and other firm surfaces.
- Designed to spread pressure more evenly under the heel, arch, and forefoot during walking and standing.
- Offers more structure than a flat foam liner without feeling excessively hard or intrusive underfoot.
- Trim-to-fit shape for most everyday closed-toe shoes, including many trainers, work shoes, and boots.
- Works best when the original removable insole is taken out first and the shoe has enough internal depth for a structured insert.
- Usually best introduced gradually over the first several days so the feet can adjust to a different support pattern.
- Should feel supportive and noticeable at first, but not sharply uncomfortable, cramped, or prone to rubbing.
- Useful for day-to-day support, but not a substitute for individual assessment if pain is severe, worsening, or difficult to explain.
- Backed by a 30-day comfort guarantee so they can be tried properly in daily use.
At a Glance: How These Insoles Help
- Support low, tired, or overworked arches during standing and walking
- Help ease first-step heel discomfort linked to plantar heel pain
- Keep the heel more stable inside a deep supportive cup
- Reduce repeated strain on the underside of the foot
- Soften impact on hard indoor floors, concrete, and pavement
- Help spread pressure more evenly under the heel and forefoot
- Make long periods in trainers, work shoes, and boots easier to tolerate
- Help tired feet and ankles feel less overworked by evening
- Offer more structure than a basic foam insert without feeling excessively rigid
- Trim to fit most everyday closed-toe shoes
- Built with a firmer support shell under the arch and heel to resist flattening over time
- Breathable top cover helps reduce heat and moisture build-up during longer wear
- Backed by a 30-day comfort guarantee so you can try them properly in daily use
Who These Insoles Are Best For
These insoles are best suited to people who need more support than a basic flat insole or thin factory liner can offer. They are especially useful when the main problem is not simply that the shoe feels hard, but that the foot feels unsupported, unstable, or easily overworked during normal daily use.
They may be a good fit if your heel hurts most when you first stand up in the morning, if it becomes sore again after sitting for a while, or if a tender area under or just in front of the heel gets worse after time on your feet. They can also be a good option if your feet feel manageable at first but become more tired, achy, or heavy as the day goes on.
They may also suit you if your arches sit low, feel weak, or seem to flatten more once your body weight moves onto them. Some people notice this mainly in the foot itself. Others notice tired ankles, aching along the inside of the arch, or shoes that wear down more quickly on the inner edge. If your current insoles feel flat and extra softness has never really solved the problem, that often points to a need for more structure as well as cushioning.
These insoles are also well suited to people who spend long hours in work shoes, trainers, or boots and want something more supportive than a simple foam liner. If you regularly replace worn shoe liners but still feel as though your feet are not getting enough help, this kind of shaped support is often the next sensible step.
They may be especially relevant if:
- you spend a lot of time standing at work
- hard floors make your feet feel much worse
- you feel fine in some shoes but struggle in flatter or less supportive pairs
- your feet tire faster than you would expect from the amount of walking you do
- you want meaningful support without going straight to a fully bespoke orthotic
Why Heel and Arch Pain Often Keeps Coming Back
Heel and arch pain often settle just enough to make it seem as though things are improving, only to return once normal routines pick up again. A quieter day may help for a while. Stretching may ease stiffness temporarily. Softer shoes may feel better at first. But once the usual demands return, long shifts, errands, commuting, time on stairs, or simply more time on your feet, the same discomfort often starts to build again.
The main reason is that short-term relief does not always change how the foot handles weight and movement. A sore area may calm down for a day or two, but if the heel still lands in the same way or the arch still drops into the same tiring position, the tissues that were settling can quickly become irritated again. The foot may have had a brief rest, but it has not been given a different way to cope when normal life starts up again.
This is why heel and arch pain can feel so stubborn. It is not always that nothing is helping. Sometimes things are helping briefly, but the strain that keeps aggravating the foot has not changed enough to let the improvement last. A sore heel may settle when you are doing less, then flare again once repeated walking loads the same area. A tired arch may ease after a quieter evening, then become strained again during the next day’s standing and walking.
For some people, the problem shows itself most clearly at the start of the step, especially under the heel where body weight first comes down. For others, the bigger issue builds later, once the body moves forward and the arch has to keep supporting the foot over and over again. Hard surfaces often make both problems more obvious because they give the foot very little help in absorbing force. Long hours in unsupportive shoes can have a similar effect.
The aim is not simply to make the foot feel better for a few minutes. It is to reduce the repeated strain that keeps bringing the same pain back. That is where this type of insole fits in. By changing how the heel lands, how the arch is supported, and how pressure is spread through the foot inside the shoe, it can make everyday walking and standing less wearing on the sore areas.
Understanding Plantar Fasciitis and Flat Feet in More Detail
If heel pain and arch strain keep returning, it helps to understand what is happening in the foot rather than thinking of it simply as a sore heel that never quite settles. Plantar fasciitis is often described in very broad terms, but in practice it is usually a problem of repeated overload. The tissue under the foot is being asked to cope with more pull, more impact, or more repeated stress than it is handling comfortably. Low arches can make that more likely, but they are not the only factor.
A foot can look quite flat and cause very little trouble. Another can look only mildly low-arched and still be painful. What matters more is not just shape, but how the foot behaves once body weight moves onto it, how much time you spend on hard surfaces, what footwear you are using, and how much repeated strain the tissues have to absorb.
Once that is clearer, it becomes easier to understand why shaped support underfoot can help some people far more than simple cushioning on its own.
What the Plantar Fascia Does
The plantar fascia is the strong band of tissue running along the underside of the foot from the heel towards the toes. One of its main jobs is to help support the arch. It also helps the foot do two important things during walking: soften slightly when taking weight, then firm up again as you move forward into the next part of the step.
That means it is involved in almost every step you take. It helps the foot cope with body weight, control movement through the sole, and transfer force as you walk. When it is working well, you do not notice it. When it becomes irritated, ordinary standing and walking can start to feel sharply uncomfortable because the same tissue keeps being stretched and loaded again and again.
What Happens in Plantar Fasciitis
Plantar fasciitis usually develops because the tissue under the foot is being loaded more heavily, or more often, than it is coping with well. Most often, the problem shows up near the point where the plantar fascia attaches to the heel bone. That area becomes more sensitive and less tolerant of the everyday forces that walking places through it.
It is not always the result of one obvious injury. More often, it is a tissue that has been asked to absorb too much repeated strain without enough change in the way the foot is loading. Standing for long periods on hard ground, walking more than usual, or wearing shoes that give the arch very little support can all keep feeding the same load into the sore area.
In shorter-lasting cases, the problem may settle fairly quickly. In longer-lasting ones, the tissue often stays irritable because the same loading pattern keeps repeating. Hard surfaces, unsupportive footwear, sudden increases in time on your feet, or changes in the way you walk to avoid pain can all keep the cycle going.
Why the Morning Pain Feels So Sharp
One of the clearest signs of plantar heel pain is how sharp it can feel with the first few steps in the morning. Many people describe it as a stabbing pain or sudden jab under the heel that makes them cautious about putting the foot down properly at first.
This happens because the tissues under the foot and through the calf tend to stiffen slightly overnight. When you stand again, the plantar fascia is stretched as the arch lowers under body weight. If the sore area near the heel is already sensitive, that first movement can feel much sharper than the steps that follow.
As you move around, the tissue usually loosens a little and becomes easier to tolerate. That is why the pain often eases after a short time. Later in the day, the same area may become sore again once it has dealt with enough repeated loading. For some people, that later discomfort feels sharp again. For others, it feels more like bruising, aching, or a heel that has had enough.
How Flat Feet Fit Into the Picture
Low arches do not always cause pain, but they can make heel and arch problems more likely when the foot drops further under body weight than the tissues can comfortably manage. In that situation, the underside of the foot is stretched more often and more heavily than it should be, especially during long periods on your feet.
What matters more than how the foot looks when you are standing still is what it does once weight moves over it. If the arch keeps giving way and the heel keeps drifting inward, the structures supporting the inside of the foot do not get much of a break. That is when the foot often starts to feel tired, heavy, and overworked even if there is not one sharply painful spot.
This is also why one foot may be worse than the other. One side often flattens more, tires faster, or carries load slightly differently. Small differences in walking pattern, previous injury, leg dominance, or shoe wear can all make one foot more troublesome than the other even when both look broadly similar.
How High Arches Can Also Contribute
High arches can lead to trouble for a different reason. Instead of dropping too much, the foot may stay relatively rigid when it meets the ground. That can leave the heel and forefoot dealing with more force than they should, because the middle of the foot is not helping enough to spread the load.
So while flatter feet often create trouble through too much drop and pull, high-arched feet can create trouble through too little give and too much concentrated pressure. The discomfort may show up in a similar part of the foot, but the route into it is different.
That is why support under the foot is not only about lifting the arch. In some feet, the bigger benefit comes from improving contact through the sole, spreading force more evenly, and reducing harsh impact under the heel and forefoot.
Where Insoles Fit Into a Sensible Plan
Supportive insoles are best seen as one useful part of a practical approach. Their role is simple: they give the foot a better base, improve how the heel sits, soften repeated contact with the ground, and reduce how much force keeps concentrating through the sorest parts of the sole.
For someone with plantar heel pain, that may mean less repeated pull through the tissue near the heel. For someone with low arches, it may mean the foot is not dropping and tiring so heavily all day. For someone spending long hours on hard ground, it may simply mean the feet feel less worn down by the end of the day.
They work best alongside sensible footwear, manageable activity levels, and simple self-care where useful. That might mean being more careful about very flat shoes, spreading walking and standing more evenly through the day, or combining support with gentle stretching if stiffness is part of the problem.
When It Is Sensible to Seek Advice
Plantar heel pain is common, but it is still worth seeking advice if symptoms are severe, getting worse rather than better, or interfering significantly with daily life. The same applies if there is marked swelling, unusual numbness, pain that seems unrelated to standing or walking, or symptoms that simply do not fit the more familiar picture of heel or arch soreness.
That does not mean every sore heel needs specialist help straight away. But persistent, confusing, or clearly worsening symptoms are easier to deal with when you know what you are dealing with and have a clear plan.
How Our Arch Support Insoles Help
Once you understand why heel and arch pain keep coming back, it becomes clearer why a thin soft liner often is not enough. If the foot is still dropping too far, the heel is still moving too loosely, or the same sore area is still taking too much force, the tissues underneath are still being asked to cope with the same strain.
These insoles are designed to change that. Rather than leaving the arch and heel to manage everything on their own, they give the foot a firmer, more stable base inside the shoe. That can reduce the repeated strain feeding into the sore areas and make everyday movement easier to tolerate.
How the Arch Support Helps
The contoured shape under the arch gives the middle of the foot something firmer to rest against. For people with low or tired arches, that support helps reduce how far the arch drops once body weight moves onto it. When the arch is better supported, the plantar fascia does not have to stretch and control as much with each step. That can reduce the repeated strain travelling into the heel attachment and through the arch itself.
For people with higher arches, the benefit is a little different. The contoured support helps bring more of the sole into contact with the shoe, which can improve how force is shared from heel to forefoot. When more of the foot is taking part, the heel and ball of the foot are not left dealing with so much concentrated pressure on their own.
Why a Steadier Heel Matters
The heel is where every step begins, so the way it lands matters. The heel bone and the joints around it help guide the rest of the foot as you move from first contact into the middle part of the step. If the heel moves too loosely inside the shoe, rolls too far inward, or lands without much control, the rest of the foot often has to work harder to make up for it.
The deeper heel cup helps hold the heel more centrally inside the shoe. That can improve control at the start of the step and reduce some of the twisting and drifting that make the arch and heel work harder than they need to. For someone whose heel feels bruised or sensitive, a better-held heel can also make the landing feel less loose and less jarring.
Spreading Load More Evenly
One reason certain parts of the foot become sore is that they are taking more than their fair share of the force. When the arch is not well supported and the heel is not sitting securely, pressure can keep building through the same smaller areas step after step.
By supporting the arch and holding the heel more centrally, the insole helps spread force more evenly across the sole. That matters because sore tissues usually become less tolerant when the same point keeps absorbing most of the impact or most of the push through the step.
A more even pressure pattern will not remove every symptom, but it can make standing and walking feel less punishing. In practice, that may mean you can stay on your feet a little longer before the soreness builds, or that the heel and forefoot feel less bruised by the end of a busy day.
Softening Repeated Impact
If you spend long hours on your feet, the problem is often not just movement itself but the repetition of it. Hundreds or thousands of steps on concrete, tile, laminate, or pavement can gradually make a fairly manageable foot problem feel much worse.
The cushioning layer helps soften that repeated impact. This matters most several hours into the day, when the foot would otherwise start to feel worn down by firm surfaces. It is particularly useful for people who work on hard floors, walk a lot outdoors, or notice that firm ground brings symptoms on much faster than softer surfaces do.
When repeated contact is cushioned, sensitive tissues under the heel and forefoot do not have to deal with the same force peak every time the foot lands. That can make longer walks, busy workdays, and time on hard ground easier to manage.
Taken together, these features give the foot a more supportive and more forgiving base through the parts of the day that usually cause the most trouble.
What Makes This Design Different
Many insoles do one of two things. They feel soft for a while but flatten quickly, or they feel supportive but too hard and intrusive to wear for long. This design aims for a more practical middle ground. Instead of working like a thin foam liner that disappears under body weight, or a very rigid insert that feels awkward in everyday shoes, these insoles are shaped to provide meaningful support while still being realistic for daily wear.
That balance matters because comfort in the first few minutes and comfort after six hours are not always the same thing. Plenty of inserts feel pleasant when you first put them on, but offer very little structure once the foot starts to load them properly. Others hold the foot very firmly but feel so aggressive under the arch or around the heel that people stop wearing them consistently.
Support Shaped for Real-World Comfort
The arch contour is designed to support the foot without feeling bulky or overly forceful under the midfoot. For low or tired arches, that shape gives the inside of the foot something firmer to work against, helping reduce how far the arch drops once weight moves over it. At the same time, it is shaped to feel supportive rather than harsh, so it is less likely to create the hard-ridge feeling that puts some people off more rigid inserts.
This matters most for people who have tried very flat liners and found them too unsupportive, but are wary of highly aggressive orthotic shapes. Daily support needs to feel present enough to help, but comfortable enough that you will keep using it.
A Deep Heel Cup That Helps Without Digging In
At the back of the insole, the heel sits inside a deeper cup that helps keep the foot more settled inside the shoe. This helps improve control of the heel and back of the foot, but it also needs to feel comfortable enough for all-day use. A good heel cup should guide the heel without rubbing at the edges, lifting awkwardly inside the shoe, or making the back of the shoe feel cramped.
That is one reason shape matters more than depth alone. If the heel feels better centred and more secure, the rest of the foot often feels more organised as well. For people whose feet tend to drift inward as they tire, that can make each step feel less unsteady and less demanding by the end of the day.
Layered Cushioning for Long Hours on Your Feet
On top of the structured base is a cushioning system designed to make hard ground feel less punishing over time. The softer upper layer adds underfoot comfort straight away, while the firmer support beneath helps absorb and spread force more effectively during walking and standing.
This is different from the kind of flat soft insert that feels cushioned at first but quickly compresses and leaves the foot with very little help underneath. The aim is not simply softness. It is comfort that still does its job after repeated loading over the course of the day.
Breathable Top Cover for Everyday Wear
The top layer is designed with everyday practicality in mind as well as comfort. A breathable cover helps reduce heat and moisture build-up inside the shoe, which matters more the longer the insoles are worn.
That may sound like a small detail, but it can affect comfort more than people expect. A hotter, damper shoe is more likely to lead to rubbing, slipping, and general discomfort, especially in work footwear or shoes worn for long hours. If the foot is already sensitive, even a small amount of extra rubbing can make the day more difficult.
Built to Hold Its Shape Better Than Basic Inserts
One of the most common complaints about basic insoles is that they feel fine at first, then flatten quickly and stop offering much support. These insoles are designed with a more durable support shell under the arch and heel, so the structure is less likely to collapse with regular use.
That means the support should stay more consistent over time rather than fading as soon as the top layer starts to compress. For people relying on their insoles every day, that consistency matters. It is not much use finding something comfortable if it stops doing its job after a short period of wear.
Trim-to-Fit for a Better Match in Everyday Shoes
Each insole can be trimmed to shape if needed, using the original insole from your shoe as a guide. This makes it easier to get a neater fit across different types of everyday footwear rather than relying on a one-shape-fits-all approach.
A good fit matters more than many people realise. If the insole sits too long, bunches at the toe, lifts at the edge, or shifts in the shoe, comfort and support both suffer. A properly trimmed insole tends to sit flatter, feel more natural, and stay where your foot can actually use the support properly.
A Practical Middle Ground Before Bespoke Orthotics
For many people, these insoles sit in a useful middle ground. They offer far more support than a basic flat insert, but without the cost, complexity, or all-day harshness some people associate with very rigid custom devices.
That makes them a sensible first step for people who want meaningful arch and heel support in everyday footwear but are not yet at the stage of needing, or wanting, a fully bespoke orthotic. For common patterns of plantar heel pain, tired arches, low-arch strain, and general foot fatigue, this level of support is often enough to make a worthwhile day-to-day difference.
Fit, Shoes, and Getting Used to Them
These insoles are designed for everyday closed-toe shoes such as trainers, work shoes, and boots. In most cases, they work best in footwear that already has a removable factory insole, a reasonably stable sole, and enough internal depth to take a structured insert without making the fit feel cramped.
Remove the Original Insole First
If your shoe already contains a removable insole, take that out first before fitting the new one. This creates space and helps the support sit at the right depth inside the shoe. Leaving the original insole in place can make the shoe too tight and change how the support sits under your foot.
Trimming to Fit
If trimming is needed, use the original insole as a guide and cut small amounts at a time. It is much easier to take a little more off than to try to rescue an insole that has been cut too short.
Once trimmed, place the insole into the shoe and check that it lies flat, reaches the back of the heel properly, and does not bunch at the toe or lift at the edges. If the fit feels tight over the top of the foot, first check that the original insole has been removed.
Which Shoes Work Best
Some shoes naturally work better with this kind of support than others. Trainers, walking shoes, many work shoes, and many casual boots are often the easiest place to start. Shoes that are very shallow, narrow through the toe box, or tight over the instep can be less suitable even if they are technically the right size. If a shoe already feels close-fitting with its original liner, adding structured support may make it too tight.
What to Expect at First
At first, structured support may feel firmer or more noticeable than what you are used to, especially if your usual insoles are flat or very soft. That difference is normal. A supportive insole should feel present under the arch and more shaped around the heel than a standard liner, but it should not feel sharp, jarring, or as though one part of the foot is being pushed up too aggressively.
Building Up Wear Gradually
Most people do best by building up wear gradually. A sensible start is to wear them for shorter periods at first, then increase use over several days. For example, you might begin with an hour or two around the house or during a shorter outing, then move to half-days, then longer daily wear once the shape feels more familiar.
That gives the foot time to adjust to a different support pattern rather than being asked to cope with it all at once. Some people settle into them quickly. Others need a week or two before the support stops feeling unusual.
Adaptation Versus Poor Fit
There is a difference between adaptation and poor fit. Adaptation usually feels like increased awareness of the support at first, followed by the foot settling into it over time. Poor fit is more likely to feel like rubbing, obvious cramping, the heel lifting awkwardly, the toes being crowded, or one area feeling sharply pressured rather than supported.
The main things to check early on are simple:
- the insole should lie flat inside the shoe
- the heel should sit right to the back without rocking
- the shoe should not feel noticeably tighter over the top of the foot
- the arch should feel supportive, not intrusive
- the insole should stay in place rather than sliding forward
If the fit feels wrong, the issue is often the shoe rather than the support itself. Even a well-designed insole cannot work properly inside footwear that is too shallow, too narrow, or too worn out to hold the foot securely.
Why Footwear Matters More Than People Think
The shoe matters as much as the insole. A good insole inside a poor shoe can only do so much. When the shoe and the support work well together, the foot usually feels more settled, more comfortable, and less easily irritated.
A supportive shoe does not have to be heavy or specialist-looking. What matters more is that it holds the foot reasonably well, has enough depth for the insole to sit properly, and is not already worn down in a way that changes how the foot lands.
Why Very Flat Shoes Can Be Hard on Sore Feet
Very flat shoes can leave the underside of the foot doing most of the work on its own. If the arch already struggles with load, or if the heel is sensitive after rest, flat shoes often make that more obvious rather than less.
The issue is not just heel height. It is the lack of structure under the foot and the lack of help in controlling how the foot takes weight. Shoes that feel light and flexible in the hand are not always the ones that feel best after several hours on your feet.
Why Worn-Out Shoes Often Keep Symptoms Going
Even a shoe that was once supportive can become unhelpful once it is badly worn. A tired midsole, a collapsed heel area, or uneven wear at the sole can change how the foot lands and rolls. That means the same sore structures may keep getting irritated even if the shoe still looks usable from the outside.
This catches a lot of people out because old shoes may still feel comfortable in a familiar way. But if the internal support has broken down or the sole is wearing unevenly, they may be part of the reason symptoms keep returning.
Why the Depth of Your Shoes Matters
A structured insole needs enough room inside the shoe to sit properly. If the shoe is too shallow, the foot can feel cramped, the support may sit too high, and the insole may become uncomfortable even if the design itself is sound.
This is one reason some people wrongly assume a supportive insole is not for them, when the real issue is that the shoe was never a good match for that kind of support. A roomy shoe is not automatically a supportive one, but enough internal space is essential if the insole is going to sit and work properly.
Why Supportive Shoes Help Insoles Work Better
A supportive insole works best when the shoe around it also offers some stability. A firm heel counter, a reasonably stable sole, and enough room inside the shoe all help the insole do its job. The shoe and the insole support each other. One without the other is often less effective.
That does not mean you need specialist footwear. It simply means the insole tends to work best in shoes that are not working against it. Even good support under the foot has limits if the upper is loose, the heel area is collapsing, or the whole shoe twists too easily with each step.
Why Open Footwear Is Often Less Suitable
Structured insoles usually work best when the shoe helps hold the foot securely over them. Open footwear often does not do that particularly well. If the foot slides, lifts, or shifts too much, the support underneath cannot stay in the right relationship to the heel and arch.
That does not mean every open style is impossible, but most people get more reliable support from insoles in closed-toe shoes that hold the heel and midfoot properly. In practical terms, trainers, work shoes, and boots are usually a better match for this type of insert.
How This Type of Insole Can Help with Related Foot, Leg, and Pressure Problems
By this point, the main ideas should be clear: heel and arch pain often keep coming back because the same parts of the foot are being loaded in the same way day after day, and a better-supported position inside the shoe can help change that. The next question is usually more personal: which description sounds most like what your own feet are doing?
Not everybody thinks in terms of diagnoses, and they do not need to. Most people notice symptoms, places that hurt, times of day that are worse, and shoes or surfaces that make things more difficult. The guide below is there to help you match those experiences more closely to the kind of support these insoles are designed to provide.
How to Tell These Problems Apart
Several foot problems can sound similar at first, especially when pain builds gradually rather than appearing in one obvious moment. It is common to be unsure whether the main trouble is the heel, the arch, the forefoot, or a nearby area that is being affected by how the foot is coping underneath.
The guide below is not there to diagnose the problem, but it can help you work out which description sounds closest to your own symptoms. If the symptoms are severe, persistent, or difficult to explain, it is sensible to speak to a GP, physiotherapist, or podiatrist.
Plantar Fasciitis Versus General Heel Pain
Plantar heel pain is usually worst with the first few steps after rest, especially in the morning or after sitting. The pain is often sharp and focused under or just in front of the heel. It may ease after a short time, then build again later in the day.
More general heel pain is often described as bruising or soreness that feels steadier rather than sharply spiking at the start. It may feel more spread across the underside of the heel rather than focused in one specific area.
Flat Feet Versus General Foot Fatigue
Flat feet often show up as arches that look low when standing and flatten further once weight moves onto them. The discomfort is usually more of a dragging ache through the arch and inner foot than a sharp pain. The feet often feel more strained by evening, especially in less supportive shoes.
General foot fatigue can feel similar, but without the same clear sense of arch collapse or inward roll. The whole foot simply feels overworked, heavy, or tired by the end of the day.
Metatarsalgia Versus Morton’s-Type Forefoot Pain
Metatarsalgia usually feels like bruising, aching, or pressure under the ball of the foot. It often builds with standing and walking and may feel worse during the part of the step where the front of the foot pushes you forward.
Morton’s-type pain often feels sharper, more burning, or as though something is trapped under or between the toes. It is usually more localised and more easily aggravated by tighter shoes.
Achilles Pain Versus Heel Pain
Achilles pain is usually felt at the back of the heel or into the lower calf rather than under the heel. It may feel stiff first thing in the morning, tender along the tendon, or sore after a lot of walking or standing.
Heel pain linked to the plantar fascia is usually felt under the heel rather than behind it, and it tends to spike most sharply with the first steps after rest rather than building gradually through the tendon during activity.
Foot-Linked Knee Pain Versus Knee Problems Alone
Knee discomfort linked to foot mechanics often feels worse when the feet are tired, on stairs, slopes, or uneven ground, and may improve in more supportive shoes. It is often more of a background irritation than a sharp pain within the joint itself.
Knee pain from other causes may feel more constant, more focused within the joint, or clearly linked to specific knee movements rather than to how long you have been on your feet. If knee pain is severe, locking, giving way, or accompanied by swelling, it is worth seeking advice from a physiotherapist or GP.
Using Them Well Day to Day
Once the insoles are fitted and the feet have had a little time to adjust, the next step is to use them consistently enough for the support to make a practical difference. The aim is to change how the foot is supported during the parts of the day that usually keep symptoms going.
That usually means using them most in the shoes you rely on for the longest or most demanding parts of the day. For some people that means work shoes. For others it means the trainers they wear for longer walks or the boots they use during busier days. The more predictable the aggravation, the more important it is to use the support in those situations.
Consistency matters. If the foot is better supported one day, then left flat and unsupported the next, the same irritated tissues often end up being challenged again. That does not mean you need to wear them every waking hour, but regular use in the footwear and activities that usually bring symptoms on gives them the best chance to help.
It is also worth giving the feet enough time to settle into the support before deciding too quickly that it is not helping. A shaped insole often feels different at first, especially if what you were using before was flat or very soft. Provided the fit is good and the support does not feel sharply uncomfortable, that early awareness often settles over the first several days.
Some simple habits can also help. Avoid very shallow shoes that squash the foot down onto the support. Be cautious with badly worn shoes that no longer hold the heel or sole properly. If heel or arch pain is active, long periods barefoot on hard floors can also make symptoms more difficult to settle.
Over time, keep an eye on wear as well. If the top cover is becoming obviously flattened, the heel area is wearing heavily, or the support no longer feels as noticeable as it once did, the insole may no longer be giving the same help it did when new.
What Improvement Often Looks Like Over Time
One reason people sometimes give up on support too quickly is that they expect the change to be dramatic and immediate. In reality, improvement often shows up more gradually and in more practical ways than that.
For many people, the earliest benefit is not that the pain disappears. It is that the foot becomes easier to live on. The heel may feel less sharp on first standing. The arches may not tire as quickly. A working day, shopping trip, or longer walk may feel more manageable even if the foot is not completely symptom-free.
Improvement is also not always perfectly even. One foot may settle more quickly than the other. Some days may feel clearly better than others, especially early on. That is quite normal when the aim is to reduce repeated strain rather than produce an instant dramatic change.
The First Few Days
In the first few days, most people mainly notice the shape of the support. The arch feels more present than it did with a flat liner, the heel feels more held, and the insole may simply feel firmer than what you were used to before.
That is usually part of normal adjustment. What matters is whether the support feels unfamiliar or whether it feels wrong. A shaped insole should feel noticeable. It should not feel sharp, cramped, or as though one part of the foot is being forced into place.
The First Two Weeks
As the foot starts to adjust, the support usually feels less intrusive. This is often the stage when people begin noticing the first useful changes: less soreness on first standing, less fatigue by evening, more comfort on hard floors, or less sense of one small area taking all the force.
This stage is often more about improved tolerance than complete relief. You may still know the foot is not perfect, but it no longer feels quite so easy to aggravate.
The First Month
If the insoles suit you and are being used consistently in appropriate shoes, the benefits often become clearer over the first few weeks. Time on your feet may feel easier to tolerate, discomfort may build more slowly, and the foot may feel steadier during normal daily use.
For some people, this is the point when they realise they are thinking about their feet less often. That is often one of the clearest signs that support is helping in a practical everyday way.
Signs the Support Is Helping
- first-step heel pain feels less sharp
- arch fatigue builds more slowly
- standing feels less draining
- hard floors feel less harsh
- the sore area feels less constantly irritated
- your feet recover more easily after a busy day
- you feel more comfortable in the shoes you rely on most
Signs the Fit May Need Adjusting
- the shoe feels uncomfortably cramped
- the insole shifts or lifts inside the shoe
- there are obvious rubbing points
- one area feels sharply pressured rather than supported
- your toes feel crowded or pushed upward
- symptoms worsen rather than gradually settling
These signs do not always mean the insole is wrong. Sometimes they simply mean the fit, trimming, or shoe choice needs another look.
30-Day Comfort Guarantee
The 30-day comfort guarantee gives you time to judge them properly in the situations that matter. A few steps indoors can tell you whether the size is roughly right, but they cannot tell you much about how the support feels after a working day, a longer walk, or several hours on hard floors.
That is why a proper trial matters. Fit them carefully, build wear time gradually, and use them in the shoes and daily routines that usually bring your symptoms on. That gives you a fair basis for deciding whether this level of support suits your feet.
If they do not feel right after a reasonable trial, you can return them for a full refund. That makes it easier to try structured support properly rather than guessing based on a quick try-on.
When to Seek Further Advice
Supportive insoles can make a useful difference to common patterns of heel pain, arch strain, and foot fatigue. But they are not a substitute for proper assessment when symptoms are severe, persistent, or difficult to explain.
It is sensible to seek advice from a GP, physiotherapist, or podiatrist if:
- heel or foot pain is severe and not improving after several weeks of sensible footwear and support
- symptoms are getting worse rather than better
- there is marked swelling, redness, heat, or skin change
- pain is present even at rest or regularly wakes you at night
- you have numbness, tingling, or weakness in the foot or leg
- symptoms followed a clear injury or sudden change
- you have diabetes or circulation problems and any new foot symptoms appear
- you are unsure what is causing the discomfort or whether insoles are appropriate
In these situations, it is better to get clarity early rather than waiting for things to settle on their own. Persistent or worsening symptoms are easier to manage when you know what you are dealing with and have a clear plan.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long do these insoles last?
That depends on how often they are worn and how much load they are dealing with. With daily use, most people find they need replacing after several months once the support starts to compress or the materials show clear wear. Regular checks under the heel and forefoot will usually show when it is time for a new pair.
Can I wash these insoles?
Wipe them clean with a damp cloth and allow them to air dry naturally. Do not machine wash or tumble dry, as heat and agitation can damage the support structure.
Can I use these in work boots?
Yes, provided the boots have a removable liner and enough internal depth to take a structured insole without making the fit too tight.
Will they fit in trainers?
Most trainers with a removable insole are suitable. Remove the original liner first, then trim the new insole to match if needed. If the trainers are already quite snug, the fit may become too tight.
Can I move them between different shoes?
Yes, but it is usually more practical to have a pair for each shoe you wear regularly, especially if the fit differs from one pair to another.
Do these work for running?
These insoles are designed for walking, standing, and everyday use rather than running. Running places different demands on the foot, and most runners do better with insoles designed specifically for that activity.
Can I use these if I already have custom orthotics?
If you already have custom orthotics prescribed by a podiatrist or clinician, it is usually best to continue using those unless advised otherwise.
Will these cure my plantar fasciitis?
Insoles do not cure plantar fasciitis, but they can help reduce the repeated strain that keeps it irritated. Their role is mechanical: they support the foot, soften repeated impact, and spread force more evenly through the sole.
How soon will I feel better?
That varies. Some people notice a difference within the first few days. Others need a few weeks of consistent use before the benefit becomes clear.
What if they do not help?
If they do not feel right after a fair trial, you can return them under the 30-day comfort guarantee.
Can I trim them myself?
Yes. Use the original insole from your shoe as a guide and cut small amounts at a time.
Do they smell after wearing?
The breathable top cover helps reduce moisture and heat build-up, but all insoles can develop odour over time with regular use. Letting them air between wears helps keep them fresher.
Are they suitable for people with diabetes?
They may help spread pressure more evenly, but if you have diabetes, especially with reduced sensation or circulation problems, it is important to check shoes and insoles regularly and seek advice if you are unsure.
Will they make my shoes feel tighter?
If the original insole has been removed and the shoe has enough depth, they should not make the fit feel noticeably tighter. If the shoe feels cramped afterwards, the shoe may not have enough room for a structured insert.
One foot is worse than the other. Do I still need both insoles?
Yes. Using support in only one shoe can create an uneven base and may lead to new discomfort elsewhere.
When This Kind of Support Is a Sensible Next Step
If your main problem is first-step heel pain, tired arches, sore soles, or feet that feel overworked by the end of the day, a more supportive base inside the shoe is often a sensible next step. These insoles are designed to support the arch, steady the heel, spread pressure more evenly, and soften repeated impact from the surfaces and routines that usually keep symptoms going.
They are not there to promise instant fixes or to replace individual assessment when symptoms are severe or unusual. Their job is more practical than that: to make ordinary standing and walking easier for feet that are dealing with more strain than they are coping with comfortably.
If that sounds close to your situation, the next step is to check the fit, use them in the shoes that matter most, and give your feet enough time to adjust to a different support pattern.
General Guidance Only
This information is general guidance only. It is not a substitute for individual medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are unsure whether these insoles are suitable for you, or if you have more complex, persistent, or new unexplained symptoms, speak to a GP, physiotherapist, podiatrist, or another appropriate clinician. No product can guarantee the same outcome for every foot.
103 Reviews For This Product
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by Mary
I am a keen runner but recently I have been diagnosed with having knee tendinitis. This means that running which can cause small shocks to travel up from your feet to your knees can cause the tendinitis to become worse. I bought these insoles because of how they are meant to help absorb shock and minimize the damage the shock can cause and they have! Now I can egt out there again and start playing sport and running again.
by Ellen M. Forney
Great value for money. Did the job and got rid of my foot pain!
by Peter
Needed some good quality and long lasting insoles (Often found that many insoles before I got these one that they would wear out so quickly if you run in them a lot like me) because I do a lot of running and sports. Have had lots of problems with my feet in the past with shoes and inserts inside them not giving me the right protection from shock or not enough support to the arch which caused me to get all sorts of injuries. With a major marathon coming up I didn’t want something as silly as not wearing the right insoles to cause me to pull out because of injury so decided to buy of these and they have been great! Bought some pairs from other online places before however they didn’t give my feet the right support or just wore out far to quickly. However these insoles are just perfect for me.
by Christopher (avid runner)
I have really awkward shaped feet that causes me so many difficulties and pain in my feet. Been looking for ways to help them from everything from stretches for my feet to specialized shoes which all didn’t seem to help. But these did the job! Quite a happy person at the mo. Thank you!
by Andrea Ward
Quick delivery. Excellent product. Will order again.
by Very good indeed!
Okay here are the pros and cons that I found with these insoles after wearing them for a couple of weeks…
The pros are
-Love the breathable mesh on them.. stops my feet from sweating and getting stinky whilst running.
-The arch support actually works! I have worn tons of of different insoles through my running career and a lot of insoles I have tried that boast arch support do not give the slightest bit of arch support but these do and I have not strained my feet or got any cramps whilst running with them in my shoes! As soon as I started wearing these soles I could see a huge difference!
-Pretty lightweight!!!
-The delivery was super quick… I ordered them on a Sunday night and got them on Tuesday morning!
The Cons are
-The only con that I found was that the insoles need to be cut to size to fit into your shoes.. this isnt hard to do because there are guides etched onto the insole itself but if you go over the guides it can wreck the insole.
by Peter
I’m not happy I bought these orthotics because I have plantar fasciitis however after a week wearing these and I still have plantar fasciitis.. I have noticed that the inflammation has gone down a bit but still not instant cure!! Why not? All I want is for my fasciitis to go away.. I have no time to wait around as I want to start playing football again! this is all very disappointing for me.
by Marcus Hardy
I am really sorry to hear that your plantar fasciitis hasn’t healed up as quickly as you would have liked. You can always return the insoles to us to receive a full refund (including all postage costs).
Thank you.
by Andrew Smith
These insoles are totally worth the money! I started getting severe arch and hell pain and then later found out that it is was something called plantar fasciitis.. a friend recommended that I give these a go to try and give my arches a helping hand and keep the pressure from causing more damage whilst my arches heal up. As soon as put these inside my shoes I could fee the difference and the arch support really does help.
by Bill Sikes
Honestly I am totally shocked (in a good way) that some £9.99 orthotics I just bought as a quick replacement after loosing my £100 custom orthotics turn out to be BETTER than my £100 ones!! :O
by Frank Hopkins
Pleased with the insoles, did the job.
by Dave long term PF sufferer
I got fed up of my plantar fasciitis and the constant heel pain that comes with it.. and no matter what ever I did it would just keep on coming back with vengeance so I decided to buy some of these orthotics and I really wish I bought these sooner as my plantar fasciitis and heel pain is just about gone now! I have been suffering from plantar fasciitis for probably a whole year now but within just a few weeks of wearing these inside my shoes my pf has gotten a lot better! Thank you so much I will be recommending these at the running club that I go to for sure!
by David Peters
I bought a pair of these to put inside my new running shoes.. and so far so good! I can really feel the difference when I am running in them and are really good at stopping shock (a lot better than the default insoles that came as standard with my running shoes and that is saying something!) Im really glad I bought these and now im just buying a second pair for my normal shoes as we speak.
by Made running a piece of cake for me atleast
I have worn tons of other insoles in the past including.. superfeet and scholl insoles and they were a lot more money than these but didn’t even come close to the amount of support and comfort that these insoles give your feet! If your thinking of buying any off the shelf insoles.. buy these ones and you wont be disappointed!
by mel
Overall these insoles are the best around.. (or at least the best I have worn).
I highly recommended these for an runners out there because they are light weight thanks to the carbon fiber plus the insoles are meshed so they are breathable.. so your feet aren’t going to get super sweaty and smelly. The arch support is really good in these insoles as it doesn’t over support your feet like so many other insoles do.. instead these insoles just helped to align my feet properly and correct bio mechanical problems this means that your feet will not just get weak and reliant on insoles, which is what you want!!
by Callum
Work great in my work boots. Comfy fit and got rid of my foot pain. Would buy again.
by These are a must have for any runner!
I have been wearing these orthotic insoles for the past month and here is my experience with them! I found that as soon as I started running with them inside my shoes I immediately could see that there was a massive improvement to the comfort and stability of my shoes! Not only that one of the main reasons why I bought these insoles was to help correct my pronation when I run… because I over pronate it meant that I was putting excessive strain on my arches when I run and this can lead to foot cramps, pain and even plantar fasciitis if you are not careful… these insoles really have helped a lot to correct my pronation which means that I can now concentrate fully on my running instead of constantly worrying about what foot injury I am chuffed to bits that I bought these as these are a must have for any runner particularly if you over pronate your feet like me!
by Really please with these :)
Couldn’t be happier with these insoles! I bought them after having to throw away some others I bought for my plantar fasciitis from another site that were double the money and actually made things worse for me, I developed a heel spur from them! With these orthotics I have had zero problems with them and they have really helped ease my plantar fasciitis.. and have even helped reduce the size of my heel spur brought on by the other cruddy insoles I got. Lesson learned… not always the most expensive orthotics are the best!
by Walter Higgs
Bought these on a whim as a quick and cheap replacement after I lost my custom insoles.. turns out these actually work a lot better than my super expensive custom insoles! cheers!
by A super pair of insoles (despite being delivered in a cheap bin bag)!
I was a bit skeptical at first after receiving my insoles in a loose and cheap looking bag (I guess nuovahealth have to cut corners somewhere to sell these insoles so cheaply) but once I started to wear them I was surprised at just how comfortable these insoles are to wear and that is the main thing so who cares if they got delivered in a cheap bag! I have now been wearing these for just about 2 weeks now and so far so good as they have greatly reduced the aches and pains in my feet and made wearing my once super uncomfortable shoes comfortable!
by Mathewww
I decided to buy some of these insoles as replacements for the ones that came with my new running shoes.. because the ones in my running shoes did not offer any kind of arch support and were useless. I am really glad that I purchased these because they have really improved the overall comfort and support in my shoes! I have now been wearing them for a couple weeks now and have zero complaints! If you know what good for your feet you will buy a pair of these!