Foot Pain When Walking: Plantar Fascia, Tendon, Stress Injury, Nerve, Or Arthritis?
Author: DokterSingapura Editorial Team
Clinical review: Dr Terence Tan, licensed medical doctor in Singapore
Founder, The Pain Relief Clinic
Reviewed: May 2026
Foot pain when walking can be difficult to interpret.
Some people feel pain under the heel.
Others feel pain in the ball of the foot, arch, ankle, toes, or outer side of the foot.
Some symptoms improve after warming up.
Others worsen the longer someone walks.
The practical question is:
Where is the pain coming from, and is it safe to keep walking?
Why Foot Pain During Walking Has Many Possible Causes
The foot carries body weight with every step.
Walking loads:
- bones
- joints
- ligaments
- tendons
- nerves
- fascia
- muscles
- skin and soft tissue
Because many structures are involved, foot pain should not be diagnosed based only on the word “foot pain.”
Location, timing, footwear, activity change, and associated symptoms matter.
Pain Under The Heel
Pain under the heel is commonly linked to plantar fasciitis.
Typical features include:
- pain with first steps in the morning
- pain after rest
- pain under the heel
- pain after prolonged standing
- pain that may ease after walking briefly, then return later
AAOS describes plantar fasciitis as commonly causing pain on the bottom of the foot near the heel, especially with the first few steps after getting out of bed or after a long rest. (OrthoInfo)
However, heel pain is not always plantar fasciitis.
Other possibilities include:
- heel fat pad irritation
- stress fracture
- nerve irritation
- inflammatory arthritis
- referred pain
- heel spur-related findings in selected cases
Pain At The Back Of The Heel
Pain at the back of the heel may involve the Achilles tendon.
Possible patterns include:
- pain when walking uphill
- pain climbing stairs
- stiffness in the morning
- pain during running
- tenderness along the tendon
- swelling or thickening
Achilles tendon pain is often load-related.
It may appear after sudden changes such as:
- more walking
- more running
- new shoes
- hill training
- returning to exercise after a break
This type of pain often needs careful load management, not just rest.
Pain In The Ball Of The Foot
Pain in the ball of the foot may be called metatarsalgia.
It may feel like:
- walking on a pebble
- burning under the forefoot
- aching under the toes
- pain worse in narrow shoes
- pain worse when barefoot on hard floors
The NHS notes that pain in the ball of the foot is often caused by exercise, running, tight shoes, arthritis, or foot shape increasing pressure in that region. (nhs.uk)
Possible causes include:
- increased forefoot pressure
- metatarsalgia
- Morton’s neuroma
- joint irritation
- callus-related pressure
- arthritis
- stress injury
- footwear problems
Pain In The Arch
Arch pain may be linked to:
- plantar fascia irritation
- tendon overload
- flatfoot-related strain
- sudden increase in walking
- footwear change
- muscle fatigue
- nerve irritation
Arch pain should be interpreted together with heel pain, calf tightness, footwear, and walking load.
Pain On The Top Of The Foot
Pain on the top of the foot can be different.
Possible causes include:
- extensor tendon irritation
- tight shoe pressure
- midfoot arthritis
- stress fracture
- nerve irritation
- trauma-related injury
If pain worsens with walking and becomes more focal over time, stress injury should be considered.
Stress Fracture: An Important Cause Not To Miss
A stress fracture is a small crack or severe bone stress injury.
It may develop from repetitive loading, especially after a sudden activity increase.
Possible features include:
- gradual onset pain
- pain worsening with walking or running
- pain improving with rest early on
- focal tenderness
- swelling
- pain becoming more persistent over time
Mayo Clinic notes that stress fracture pain typically starts gradually, worsens during weight-bearing activity, and may be accompanied by swelling. (Mayo Clinic)
This matters because continuing to walk heavily on a stress injury may worsen the problem.
Nerve-Related Foot Pain
Some foot pain is nerve-related.
Possible nerve symptoms include:
- burning
- tingling
- numbness
- electric pain
- pins and needles
- altered sensation
- pain radiating into toes
Causes may include:
- local nerve irritation in the foot
- tarsal tunnel-type symptoms
- Morton’s neuroma
- diabetic neuropathy
- nerve symptoms referred from the lower back
According to Dr Terence Tan, foot pain with numbness, tingling, or burning should not automatically be treated as a simple soft tissue strain.
Arthritis-Related Foot Pain
Foot arthritis may cause:
- joint pain
- stiffness
- swelling
- reduced movement
- pain with walking
- pain in the big toe, midfoot, or ankle region
Arthritis-related foot pain may worsen with prolonged standing or walking and may improve with rest.
X-ray may sometimes be useful when arthritis is suspected.
When Pain May Be Coming From The Back
Some foot symptoms are actually related to the lower back or nerves.
This becomes more relevant if there is:
- lower back pain
- buttock pain
- pain travelling down the leg
- numbness
- tingling
- weakness
- foot drop
- symptoms affected by sitting, standing, or spine movement
A foot problem and back problem can also coexist.
The pattern matters.
Footwear Is Often Part Of The Story
Footwear can significantly change foot loading.
Pain may be linked to:
- worn-out shoes
- narrow toe boxes
- hard soles
- high heels
- thin slippers
- sudden change to minimalist shoes
- poor arch support
- shoes rubbing the back of the heel
- walking barefoot on hard floors
The NHS notes that ball-of-foot pain may be linked to tight footwear, running, arthritis, and foot shape that increases pressure. (nhs.uk)
Footwear review is often a practical early step.
When Walking Through Pain May Be A Problem
Not all foot pain should be “walked off.”
Be more cautious if:
- pain worsens with each walk
- pain becomes more focal
- swelling develops
- limping occurs
- pain persists at rest
- weight-bearing becomes difficult
- pain followed injury
- numbness or weakness appears
These patterns deserve assessment.
Does Foot Pain Need Imaging?
Not always.
Many cases can be assessed clinically.
Imaging may be considered when:
- pain follows trauma
- fracture or stress injury is suspected
- swelling is significant
- pain is persistent
- diagnosis remains unclear
- symptoms worsen despite care
- nerve or joint causes need evaluation
Possible imaging may include:
- X-ray
- ultrasound
- MRI
The right imaging depends on the clinical question.
Practical First Steps
Depending on the pattern, early steps may include:
- reducing aggravating walking temporarily
- reviewing footwear
- avoiding barefoot walking on hard floors
- using cushioning or support where suitable
- modifying exercise load
- gentle mobility where appropriate
- gradual strengthening
- seeking assessment if symptoms persist or worsen
The goal is not simply to stop all movement.
The goal is to reduce excessive irritation while identifying the cause.
Common Patient Mistakes
Mistake 1: Assuming All Foot Pain Is Plantar Fasciitis
Heel pain may be plantar fascia-related, but forefoot, tendon, nerve, arthritis, and stress injury causes are also possible.
Mistake 2: Continuing The Same Walking Load
If walking is the trigger, continuing the same load may prolong symptoms.
Mistake 3: Ignoring Swelling Or Focal Bone Pain
These may suggest injury or stress fracture.
Mistake 4: Wearing Unsupportive Shoes Indoors
Hard floors and thin slippers may aggravate symptoms.
Mistake 5: Missing Nerve Symptoms
Burning, tingling, numbness, or weakness need broader assessment.
When To Seek Assessment
Consider assessment if:
- foot pain persists beyond a short period
- walking is becoming harder
- you are limping
- pain is worsening
- swelling is present
- pain is focal and bone-like
- pain follows trauma
- symptoms include numbness or tingling
- pain occurs at rest
- footwear changes do not help
Seek prompt review if:
- you cannot bear weight
- severe swelling or bruising occurs
- deformity is visible
- infection signs appear
- major trauma occurred
- weakness or foot drop develops
Practical Questions To Ask Yourself
If your foot hurts when walking, ask:
- Where exactly is the pain?
- Is it under the heel, back of heel, arch, ball of foot, toes, or top of foot?
- Did walking or running volume increase recently?
- Did I change shoes?
- Is there swelling?
- Is pain focal over one bone?
- Does rest improve it?
- Is there numbness or tingling?
- Is there lower back or leg pain?
- Am I limping?
- Is it improving or worsening?
These details help decide whether self-care, physiotherapy, doctor-led assessment, or imaging is most appropriate.
The Main Takeaway
Foot pain when walking is a symptom pattern, not a diagnosis.
It may come from plantar fasciitis, Achilles tendon pain, metatarsalgia, arthritis, nerve irritation, stress fracture, footwear-related overload, or referred pain from the back.
The most useful next step depends on the exact location, walking pattern, footwear, activity history, and warning signs.
Pain that persists, worsens, causes limping, involves swelling, or feels focal and bone-like should be assessed rather than repeatedly walked through.
FAQ
Why does my foot hurt only when I walk?
Walking loads the bones, tendons, joints, fascia, and nerves of the foot. Pain may come from plantar fascia irritation, tendon overload, arthritis, footwear pressure, stress injury, or nerve symptoms.
Is foot pain when walking always plantar fasciitis?
No. Plantar fasciitis commonly causes heel pain, especially first-step morning pain, but forefoot pain, Achilles pain, stress fractures, arthritis, and nerve-related causes can also occur.
When should I worry about foot pain?
Be more cautious if pain is worsening, focal over a bone, associated with swelling, follows injury, causes limping, persists at rest, or makes weight-bearing difficult.
Do I need an X-ray or MRI?
Not always. Imaging is considered when fracture, stress injury, arthritis, unclear diagnosis, trauma, or persistent symptoms need clarification.
Can foot pain come from the back?
Yes. Nerve irritation from the lower back can sometimes cause pain, numbness, tingling, or weakness in the foot.
About The Medical Reviewer
Dr Terence Tan is a licensed medical doctor in Singapore and founder of The Pain Relief Clinic. He has over 20 years of clinical experience in musculoskeletal assessment and practical non-surgical care pathways.
Medical Disclaimer
This article is for general educational purposes only and does not replace personalised medical assessment, diagnosis, or treatment by a licensed healthcare professional.


