Footwear Measurements -- Sizing & Spec Numbers
Shoe sizing is more confusing than it should be -- three main systems, width fittings, and brands that all fit slightly differently. This guide explains the UK, EU and US scales, how to measure your own feet properly, what width and volume mean, and the spec numbers (drop, stack, weight) you will see quoted. For brand-specific conversions, every brand guide has its own sizing chart.
Sizing Systems
UK, EU & US Sizes
The three main sizing scales and why the same foot has three different numbers.
How they work
UK, EU and US scales each measure length differently, so one pair of feet might be a UK 8, EU 42 and US 9. EU sizing uses the Paris point (about 6.6mm per size); UK and US use a barleycorn (about 8.5mm) but start from different points.
Getting it right
Always check the brand's own conversion chart rather than assuming -- the gaps between systems are not consistent. Each brand guide on site carries its sizing conversion.
Half Sizes & Size Gaps
Why half sizes exist and how much length a single size really adds.
How they work
A full size is roughly 8.5mm of length and a half size about 4mm. Half sizes give a closer fit between the full steps, which matters because even a few millimetres changes how a shoe holds the foot.
Getting it right
If you are between sizes, the right choice depends on the shoe's shape and your foot volume -- often size up for a roomy toe box, stay true for a snug performance fit.
Men's, Women's & Kids' Sizing
How the scales shift between men's, women's and children's shoes.
How it works
Men's and women's UK sizes share a scale but women's lasts are usually cut narrower with a lower volume. US sizing splits men's and women's by about 1.5 sizes. Kids' sizing restarts its own scale and changes fast as feet grow.
Getting it right
Unisex trainers are usually listed in men's UK sizes -- women often size down by around 1.5 from a US men's number. Check the listing's gender scale before ordering.
Width Fittings
The letter codes (D, E, EE) that describe how wide a shoe is cut.
How they work
Width fittings run from narrow to wide -- commonly D (standard men's), E, EE and beyond for wider feet, and B for standard women's. Not every brand offers them, but where they do, the same length comes in different widths. See the foot-shape section in the fit hub.
Getting it right
If shoes pinch across the ball of the foot but the length is right, you need a wider fitting, not a longer shoe. Brands like New Balance and some boots offer multiple widths.
Measuring Your Foot
Measuring Foot Length
The right way to measure your foot at home for an accurate size.
How to do it
Stand on a sheet of paper at the end of the day (feet swell), mark the heel and longest toe, and measure the distance. Do both feet -- they often differ -- and size to the larger one. Compare against the brand's size chart in centimetres.
Why it matters
Standing while measuring loads the foot to its real length. Measuring sitting down or in the morning gives a size that turns out too small once you are on your feet.
Measuring Foot Width
How to find your width fitting, not just your length.
How to do it
With your foot on the paper, mark the widest points across the ball of the foot and measure between them. Compare to the brand's width guide where one exists, or use it to judge whether to size up for room.
Why it matters
Two feet of the same length can need very different widths. Knowing your width stops you buying longer shoes just to get more room across the foot.
Instep & Volume
The height and girth of your foot -- why some shoes feel tight even in the right size.
How it works
The instep is the top of the foot; its height sets how much volume a shoe needs. A high-volume foot can feel crushed in a low-volume shoe even at the correct length and width.
Why it matters
If a shoe is the right size but feels tight over the top or hard to lace down, it is a volume mismatch. Lacing technique and shoe choice fix it -- see the fit hub.
Why Brands Fit Differently
The same size in two brands rarely fits the same -- here is why.
How it works
Every shoe is built on a last, the foot-shaped mould that sets length, width, toe shape and volume. Two brands using the same nominal size but different lasts will fit differently. It is the main reason for size confusion.
Why it matters
You cannot assume your size carries across brands. Always check each brand's sizing guide -- the construction hub explains the last in full.
Spec Numbers
Drop (Spec Number)
The heel-to-toe height figure quoted in millimetres on running shoes.
What it is
Drop is the millimetre difference between heel and forefoot stack height. Quoted as a single number (e.g. 8mm), it tells you how the shoe tilts the foot and which stride it suits.
How to read it
High drop (10-12mm) suits heel-strikers and eases the calf; low drop (0-6mm) loads the lower leg and suits a midfoot landing. The sole-technology hub explains the effect in full.
Stack Height & Weight
The two numbers that tell you how cushioned and how heavy a shoe is.
What they are
Stack height (mm) is the foam underfoot -- higher means more cushioning. Weight (grams) is quoted per single shoe in a stated size; lighter feels faster but often means less foam and durability.
How to read them
Compare like for like: weight is meaningless without the size it was measured at, and a high stack with a low weight signals a modern lightweight foam. Both are in the sole-technology hub.
Reading a Size Chart
How to use a brand's conversion chart instead of guessing your size.
What it is
A size chart maps foot length in centimetres to that brand's UK, EU and US sizes. Because brands differ, the chart -- not your usual number -- is the reliable way to size a new brand.
How to read it
Measure your foot in cm, find that length on the chart, and take the size next to it. Every brand guide on site links its own conversion chart, such as the On sizing conversion and Salomon conversion.
Frequently asked questions
How do I measure my shoe size at home?
Stand on a sheet of paper at the end of the day when feet are at their largest, mark the heel and longest toe, and measure the length in centimetres. Do both feet and size to the larger one, then match the measurement to the brand's size chart.
Why am I a different size in different brands?
Because every shoe is built on a last -- a foot-shaped mould that sets length, width and shape. Two brands using different lasts will fit differently at the same nominal size. Always check each brand's own sizing guide rather than assuming your usual size.
What do width fittings like D and EE mean?
They describe how wide the shoe is cut at the same length, running from narrow to wide -- D is standard for men, E and EE are wider. If shoes are the right length but pinch across the ball of the foot, you need a wider fitting, not a bigger size.
Should I size up or down if I'm between sizes?
It depends on the shoe and your foot. Size up for a roomier toe box, casual wear or a high-volume foot; stay true or size down for a snug performance fit. Check the brand guide, as many note whether a model runs large or small.
What is the difference between UK, EU and US shoe sizes?
They are three separate scales that measure length differently, so one foot can be a UK 8, EU 42 and US 9. The gaps between them are not consistent, so always use the brand's conversion chart rather than a rough rule of thumb.