Shoes for wide feet
Wide feet need width grades (2E, 4E, 6E), not just a longer size — adding length fixes toe pinch but leaves a sloppy heel. These brands stock genuine wide widths in our database; each links to a brand-wide fit guide and optional wide-feet spoke.
What shoe brands have wide widths?
| Brand | Wide widths | Typical fit |
|---|---|---|
| Adidas | 2E | True to size — wide width recommended |
| ASICS | 2E, 4E | True to size — wide width recommended |
| Brooks | 2E, 4E | Runs large — standard D may fit wide feet |
| Hoka | 2E | Runs large — standard D may fit wide feet |
| New Balance | 2E, 4E, 6E | Runs large — standard D may fit wide feet |
| Reebok | 2E | True to size — wide width recommended |
| Salomon | 2E | Runs small — try wide width or size up |
| Saucony | 2E | True to size — wide width recommended |
| Skechers | 2E, 4E | True to size — wide width recommended |
| Timberland | 2E | Runs large — standard D may fit wide feet |
Full width-grade chart and mm offsets: wide fit shoes guide. Use our shoe width sizes explainer for B vs D vs 2E.
Should wide feet size up or buy wide width?
Buy wide width when the brand offers it — sizing up adds length without fixing midfoot pinch. Size up half only when the brand is D-width-only (many Nike models) or you need toe-room for swelling. New Balance, Brooks and ASICS are the safest bets for genuine multi-width performance shoes.
Do Nike shoes fit wide feet?
Most Nike lifestyle and running models are D-width only and run narrow. Wide-footed buyers typically size up half a US size or choose a roomier silhouette. See Nike sizing guide.