Flat Feet

ARCH SUPPORT & FOOT MECHANICS

Flat feet can affect how weight moves through the foot and ankle. Evaluation can help identify whether arch collapse, tendon irritation, alignment, footwear, or overuse is contributing to pain, fatigue, instability, or related foot and ankle symptoms.

Evaluation & Next Steps

Call: (702) 703-4340
Hours: Mon–Fri: 8am–5pm

Quick Summary

Key takeaway: Flat feet are common, but they should be evaluated when they cause pain, fatigue, instability, tendon irritation, walking difficulty, or progressive changes in foot shape.

Evaluation usually focuses on arch height, heel alignment, ankle motion, tendon function, walking mechanics, footwear, activity demands, and whether supportive care, custom orthotics, bracing, physical therapy, or additional imaging may be needed.

Overview

What Are Flat Feet?

Flat feet occur when the arch of the foot is low, flexible, collapsed, or poorly supported during standing and walking. Some people have flat feet without symptoms, while others develop pain or fatigue because the foot and ankle are working harder to support alignment.

Why Evaluation Matters

Evaluation helps determine whether flat feet are flexible, rigid, painful, progressive, or related to tendon irritation, arthritis, injury, footwear, or another foot and ankle condition. The right plan depends on symptoms, mechanics, and how the foot functions during daily activity.

Symptoms

Flat feet do not always cause symptoms. When they do, discomfort may appear in the arch, heel, ankle, inside of the foot, outside of the foot, or lower leg, especially after standing, walking, sports, or long days on hard surfaces.

Arch Pain or Fatigue

The arch may ache, feel tired, or become sore after standing, walking, running, or wearing unsupportive shoes.

Heel or Ankle Discomfort

Flat feet can place extra stress on the heel, ankle, and tendons that help support the arch.

Foot Shape or Alignment Changes

The arch may look lower, the heel may tilt outward, or the foot may appear to roll inward when standing.

Difficulty With Activity

Pain, fatigue, instability, or shoe-fit problems may limit walking, work, exercise, sports, or daily movement.

Seek care now if…

Prompt evaluation is recommended if flat feet are painful, worsening, causing swelling, limiting walking, associated with tendon pain, or causing new instability, weakness, numbness, or major changes in foot shape.

Causes & Risk Factors

Flat feet may be present from childhood or develop over time. In adults, symptoms can relate to tendon irritation, ligament weakness, arthritis, injury, obesity, footwear, overuse, or changes in foot and ankle alignment.

Common Causes

The cause is not always obvious from appearance alone. A foot that looks flat may be painless and stable, while a painful or changing flatfoot may need closer evaluation.

Risk Factors

Diagnosis

Diagnosis focuses on how the foot looks and functions while standing, walking, and moving. The goal is to understand whether the flatfoot is flexible or rigid, painful or painless, stable or progressive, and whether tendon or joint problems are contributing.

Typical Evaluation

What to Bring

Treatment Options

Treatment depends on pain level, flexibility, alignment, activity goals, tendon function, and whether the flatfoot is stable or progressive. Many patients start with conservative care before considering more advanced options.

Related care: Treatment planning may include supportive footwear, custom orthotics, bracing, physical therapy, activity changes, imaging, or surgical consultation when symptoms are severe or deformity progresses. Flat feet can also contribute to heel pain or plantar fasciitis when arch support and walking mechanics increase strain.

Supportive Care

Orthotics & Bracing

Rehabilitation

Further Evaluation

Recovery

Recovery depends on the cause of the flatfoot, how long symptoms have been present, activity demands, and whether tendon irritation, stiffness, or progressive deformity is involved. Many patients improve with support, mechanics changes, and consistent follow-up.

What Helps Most

  • Supportive shoes: Better footwear can reduce strain on the arch and ankle.
  • Orthotics: Inserts may improve support and pressure distribution.
  • Strength and flexibility: Exercises may help improve mechanics and tolerance.
  • Activity pacing: Adjusting load can reduce flare-ups.
  • Follow-up: Recheck symptoms if pain or shape changes continue.

When to Follow Up

  • Ongoing pain: Arch, heel, or ankle pain is not improving.
  • More flattening: The foot shape appears to be changing.
  • New weakness: Pushing off or standing on toes becomes difficult.
  • Instability: The ankle feels unstable or rolls inward.
  • Activity limits: Walking, work, or exercise remains difficult.

Frequently Asked Questions

No. Many people have flat feet without pain or limitation. Evaluation is helpful when flat feet cause pain, fatigue, instability, shoe problems, or changes in walking.

Adult flatfoot symptoms may relate to tendon irritation, ligament weakness, arthritis, injury, overuse, footwear mechanics, or gradual changes in foot and ankle alignment.

Orthotics may help support the arch, improve alignment, reduce pressure, and make standing or walking more comfortable. The right insert depends on the type of flatfoot and symptoms.

Flat feet should be checked if they are painful, worsening, causing swelling, limiting activity, or associated with tendon pain, instability, weakness, numbness, or major foot-shape changes.

Yes. Flat feet can change how force moves through the foot and ankle, which may contribute to tendon strain, ankle discomfort, instability, or fatigue.

No. Many patients improve with supportive shoes, orthotics, bracing, rehabilitation, and activity changes. Surgery is usually considered only when symptoms are severe, progressive, or not improving with conservative care.

Locations

LVVIS offers coordinated limb, vascular, vein, wound, foot, ankle, and interventional care at multiple Las Vegas locations. Choose the office that is most convenient when scheduling your visit.

LVVIS West Side Consultation Office

8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148

Consultations and vascular evaluations

LV2 Limb & Vascular Division

8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148

Limb preservation and podiatry partnership care

LVVIS East Procedure Office

2250 E Flamingo Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89119

Procedures, diagnostics, and circulatory care

LVVIS West Side Surgical Center

6120 S Fort Apache Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89148

Advanced vascular and interventional procedures