Footwear Buying Guide -- How to Choose the Right Shoes
Choosing shoes well comes down to three questions: what will you use them for, are they actually well made, and do they fit and represent value. This guide brings together everything in the other hubs into a practical buying framework -- how to match a shoe to your activity, how to judge construction and materials, and how to get the fit and price right. Wherever a topic goes deeper, it links to the hub that covers it.
Match to Activity
Choosing Running Shoes
Matching cushioning, support and speed to how and where you run.
What to consider
Match the shoe to your running: cushioned daily trainers for easy miles, stability shoes if you overpronate, light responsive shoes for speed, and lugged shoes for trail. The running hub covers training in full.
How to decide
Start with your main use and your pronation, then narrow by cushioning and drop. One shoe rarely does everything, so buy for your most common run first.
Choosing Walking & Hiking Shoes
Picking grip, protection and waterproofing for the ground and weather.
What to consider
For walking and hiking, prioritise grip, underfoot protection and -- in wet conditions -- a waterproof membrane. Deeper lugs and a rock plate suit rough trail; lighter shoes suit paths and towpaths.
How to decide
Think about the wettest, roughest ground you will cross, not the average. Match grip and protection to that, then decide if you need waterproofing for the season.
Choosing Casual & Everyday Shoes
Balancing looks, comfort and durability for daily wear.
What to consider
For everyday wear, comfort and durability matter as much as looks. A cushioned footbed, a hard-wearing upper and a versatile colour go a long way. Leather lasts and smartens up; mesh is cooler and more casual.
How to decide
Be honest about how often you will wear them and with what. A comfortable, well-made everyday pair earns its price through sheer wear, so buy quality over novelty.
Choosing Smart & Formal Shoes
What to look for in dress shoes and boots built to last and be repaired.
What to consider
For smart shoes, look at the leather and the construction. Full-grain leather and a welted or stitched sole mean a shoe that ages well and can be resoled. The construction hub explains the joins.
How to decide
Buy the best leather and construction you can afford for shoes you will keep for years. A repairable, well-made pair outlasts several cheap ones and looks better doing it.
Judging Quality
Spotting Quality
The tell-tale signs of a well-made shoe versus a throwaway one.
What to look for
Check the materials, the neatness of stitching and glue lines, how the sole is attached, and whether parts like footbeds and laces feel considered. Quality shows in clean joins, solid heel counters and good materials.
Why it matters
Most of a shoe's life is decided by how it is built, which the price tag alone does not tell you. Knowing the signs of quality stops you overpaying for looks or underpaying into disappointment.
Reading the Materials
Using the spec to judge how a shoe will look, last and feel.
What to look for
The upper material tells you a lot: full-grain leather for durability, suede for looks over wear, mesh for breathability, synthetics for value. The materials hub explains each in detail.
Why it matters
Materials drive durability, comfort and care needs. Reading the spec sheet -- not just the photo -- tells you how a shoe will perform and how much looking after it will need.
Judging Construction
How the sole is attached -- the biggest clue to durability and repairability.
What to look for
How the sole joins the upper sets durability and whether a shoe can be repaired. Cemented (glued) is light and cheap; stitched and welted builds are repairable and longer-lasting. The construction hub covers them all.
Why it matters
Construction decides whether a shoe is throwaway or a keeper. For shoes you want to last, it matters more than the badge on the side.
Fit, Value & Buying
When to Spend, When to Save
Where extra money buys real value and where it does not.
What to look for
Spend on shoes you wear often or hard -- daily trainers, work boots, smart leather -- where quality pays back in comfort and lifespan. Save on rarely-worn or fashion pairs where durability matters less.
Why it matters
Cost per wear, not sticker price, is the real measure. A pricier shoe worn daily for years can be far better value than a cheap pair replaced every season.
Getting the Fit Right
Why fit beats brand and size -- and how to get it right before buying.
What to consider
Fit is the most important thing and the most personal. Measure both feet, allow toe-box room, and remember brands fit differently. The fit hub and measurements hub cover it fully.
Why it matters
The best shoe in the wrong fit is the wrong shoe. No amount of cushioning or quality makes up for a poor fit, so always size to your feet, not your usual number.
Buying Across Brands
How to size confidently when every brand fits a little differently.
What to consider
Because each brand uses its own last, your size is not guaranteed to carry across. Check each brand's sizing guide and any note on whether a model runs large or small before ordering.
Why it matters
Assuming your usual size across brands is the commonest cause of a poor online fit. A minute checking the brand's chart saves a return and gets the fit right first time.
Buying Shoes Online
How to buy with confidence when you cannot try before you buy.
What to consider
Online, measure your feet in centimetres, use the brand's size chart, read the fit notes and reviews, and check the returns policy. Order your measured size, not your assumed one, and try them indoors on a clean surface.
Why it matters
Most online fit problems come from guessing the size. Measuring properly and using the chart turns online buying from a gamble into a reliable way to get the right shoe.
Frequently asked questions
How do I choose the right running shoes?
Start with how and where you run: cushioned daily trainers for easy road miles, stability shoes if you overpronate, light responsive shoes for speed, and lugged trail shoes for off-road. Then narrow by cushioning level and drop, and always fit to your feet. One shoe rarely does everything, so buy for your most frequent run first.
How can I tell if a shoe is good quality?
Look at the materials, the neatness of the stitching and glue lines, how the sole is attached, and whether details like the heel counter, footbed and laces feel solid. Welted or stitched soles and full-grain leather signal a durable, repairable shoe. Clean construction and good materials matter more than the price tag or brand.
When is it worth paying more for shoes?
Spend more on shoes you wear often or hard -- daily trainers, work boots, smart leather shoes -- where better materials and construction pay back in comfort and years of wear. Save on rarely-worn or fashion pairs. The real measure is cost per wear, not the sticker price.
How do I get the right size when buying online?
Measure both feet in centimetres at the end of the day, use the specific brand's size chart rather than your usual number, and read the fit notes and reviews for whether a model runs large or small. Order your measured size and check the returns policy. Brands fit differently because each uses its own last.
What is the most important thing when buying shoes?
Fit. The best, most expensive shoe in the wrong fit is still the wrong shoe -- no cushioning or quality makes up for a poor fit. Always measure your feet, allow room in the toe box, account for how each brand sizes, and choose the shoe that fits your foot and your activity.