Enter your foot length and optional width for instant results across US Men/Women/Kids, UK, EU, Japan, Korea, Australia, India, China and Mondopoint — plus brand-specific fit notes and occasion adjustment.
Enter your foot measurement, results update instantly
Shoe Size Calculator, Shoe Size Chart, Guide & How to Measure Shoe Size (US, UK, EU & International)
Between 63 and 72 percent of people wear shoes that don't correctly fit their feet — in either length or width. Most people only discover this after a painful blister, a heel slipping out mid-walk, or returning a pair they ordered online. This free shoe size calculator works as a complete foot measurement calculator: enter your foot length and it instantly converts your measurement into accurate sizes across every major international system — US men's and women's, UK, EU, Japan, South Korea, Australia, India, and Mondopoint. It also includes brand-specific guides for Nike, Adidas, New Balance, Converse, Vans, and others, because what shoe size am I in one brand and what shoe size am I in another are genuinely different answers at the same foot length.
What This Shoe Size Calculator Gives You
I built this because I kept seeing the same mistake: people converting their existing brand size instead of going back to their raw foot measurement. That single habit accounts for the majority of online shoe returns I've tracked. A Nike US 10 and an Adidas US 10 are not the same shoe — going back to centimetres every time is the only reliable fix.
One foot length measurement. Ten sizing systems. Plus width codes and brand fit guidance that generic charts never include.
How to Measure Your Foot Size at Home for Shoes — Step by Step
The two most common measurement errors I see: measuring in the morning (feet are smallest then — up to 8mm smaller than afternoon), and measuring sitting down (your arch flattens under weight, adding real length). Both cause people to end up in shoes a half-size too small. Measure standing, afternoon, with the socks you actually plan to wear.
A piece of paper, a pencil, and a ruler. That's genuinely all you need to use this as a measure foot for shoe size calculator. Always measure both feet and use the larger one — most people's feet are slightly different sizes.
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1
Prepare the surface: Place a blank sheet of paper on a hard, flat floor — not carpet. Position the paper against a wall or skirting board. Stand on the paper with your heel pressed firmly against the wall.
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2
Trace your foot: Hold a pencil or pen straight — perpendicular to the floor, not angled — and trace carefully around your foot. Keep the pen touching your skin throughout. Common mistake: tilting the pen inward. Even a slight angle underestimates your foot length by 2–4mm, which can shift your result by half a size.
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3
Mark the longest point: Your longest toe may be your big toe or your second toe — both are completely normal. Mark whichever extends furthest. Draw a straight line perpendicular to the wall edge at that point.
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4
Measure from heel to toe: Measure from the wall edge to the toe mark in centimetres. That is your foot length — the input for this foot length to shoe size calculator. Also measure the widest point across the ball of your foot for width.
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5
Repeat for both feet and use the larger measurement. Most people's feet differ by half a size. Using the smaller one means one shoe will be slightly tight — and you'll feel it by the end of the day.
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6
Big mistake: measuring first thing in the morning. Feet swell during the day and can be up to 5mm longer by late afternoon. That's nearly half a shoe size. Always measure in the afternoon or evening for an accurate fit.
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7
Enter your foot length in the calculator above, select your gender, and receive your shoe size in all systems instantly — including width guidance and brand fit notes.
You will instantly receive:
What Is a Shoe Size Calculator — and Why Doesn't Standard Sizing Work?
The short answer: shoe sizing was designed for last-making, not for shoppers. The barleycorn unit that underlies US and UK sizing is literally a grain of barley. The EU Paris Point is 2/3 of a centimetre. Neither system was designed for international cross-reference or online shopping — which is why you need a calculator rather than a simple chart lookup.
A shoe size calculator converts a direct physical measurement — your foot length in centimetres or inches — into the size codes shoe manufacturers use across different countries. Sounds straightforward. But here's the thing: there is no single global shoe sizing standard. The US, UK, EU, Japan, South Korea, Australia, and China all use different numbering systems with different starting points and different increments per size. The same foot gets described as a US 9, UK 8, EU 42–43, and a 270 Mondopoint — all correct, all different numbers. This free online shoe size calculator resolves that problem instantly, working as a complete foot measurement calculator across all systems simultaneously.
You'd expect your shoe size to stay consistent once you know it. It doesn't — not across countries, and honestly not always across brands within the same country either. A peer-reviewed systematic review in the Journal of Foot and Ankle Research, examining 18 studies across multiple countries, found that between 63 and 72 percent of participants wore shoes that didn't fit correctly in length or width. More than 60 percent of people are wearing incorrectly sized shoes right now — not because they don't care, but because sizing systems are inconsistent and most people were last properly measured as children.
A lot of people realise this after ordering two sizes and returning both. If you've ever had your heel slipping out mid-walk, or noticed your toes pressing the toebox after an hour — this is exactly why.
The international standard that attempts to fix all this is Mondopoint (ISO 9407:2019). It defines shoe size as foot length in millimetres — no arbitrary offsets, no gender adjustments, just your actual measurement. Japan, South Korea, and China use Mondopoint as their primary system. Most athletic shoe brands now include CM measurements on their labels. Honestly, Mondopoint is the only sizing system that makes complete logical sense. Knowing your CM foot length is the single most reliable cross-brand reference you can have — especially when using this tool as a shoe size calculator for online shopping, where you can't try before you buy.
How the Shoe Size Calculator Works — The Formulas Explained
Every shoe sizing system ultimately references the same thing: the length of the foot. The differences are entirely in how that measurement gets expressed — which unit, which mathematical increment, where the scale starts. Once you understand the logic, the conversions stop feeling mysterious.
The Core Measurement — Foot Length
Your foot length is the straight-line distance from the back of the heel to the tip of your longest toe. That's it. This foot size calculator uses that single number as the input for every conversion. It deliberately does not use a size from another brand — that would reintroduce the brand-specific variation this tool is designed to eliminate. Your foot length in centimetres is the universal reference point. Everything else follows from it.
US Sizing Formula
The US system is based on barleycorns — an old English unit equal to 1/3 inch (approximately 8.47mm). Each full size change equals one barleycorn of foot length. US men's size 1 begins at a last length of approximately 7.33 inches (186mm). The US women's system starts two sizes lower than men's — a US women's 8 and a US men's 6.5 correspond to the same foot length. This is why the men's shoe size calculator and the women's shoe size calculator produce different numbers from the same foot measurement. US sizing is probably the most confusing system for international shoppers for exactly this reason.
UK Sizing Formula
The UK system uses the same barleycorn increments as US but starts at a different reference point — giving the consistent one-size offset for men (US = UK + 1) and two-size offset for women (US women's = UK + 2). Unlike the US, UK sizing doesn't split by gender in the numbering. One scale applies to everyone. Australia and India follow the same UK conventions exactly.
EU Sizing Formula
EU shoe sizes use Paris Points — units of 2/3 centimetre (6.67mm). Because the EU increment is smaller than the US/UK increment (8.47mm), one US size can span one and a half EU sizes. In theory, this conversion works cleanly on a chart. In reality, it means a US 9 might be EU 42 or EU 43 depending on the specific brand's last. The calculator shows both adjacent EU sizes so you can cross-check against the brand's own chart — this is where most EU conversion errors happen, and it's the right way to handle it.
Mondopoint / Japanese / Korean / Chinese Formula
These systems express size directly as foot length in millimetres (Korea) or centimetres (Japan, China). A Mondopoint 270 means the shoe is made for a 270mm foot. No arithmetic. No offset. The number is your measurement. This is why footwear specialists consistently recommend using CM as your cross-brand reference — it bypasses the US/UK/EU arithmetic entirely. If you know your foot is 27.0 cm, you can apply that to any brand's CM chart without any conversion at all.
International Shoe Size Chart — Complete Conversion Table
One thing I want to flag before you read this table: EU sizing is based on last length, not foot length. The shoe's internal form (the last) is always 10–15mm longer than your foot. This is already built into this calculator, but many comparison charts online skip that step — which is why you'll sometimes see EU 43 quoted for a foot that should really be EU 42.
This shoe size chart covers the full adult range for men's and women's shoes across all major international systems. All values are derived from ISO 19407:2023 and ISO 9407:2019 (Mondopoint). Foot length values are given in millimetres.
Women's Shoe Size Conversion Chart
| Foot Length (mm) | Mondopoint | US Women's | UK Women's | EU | Japan (cm) | Korea (mm) | AU / India |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 210–216 | 210–215 | 4 | 2 | 35 | 21.0–21.5 | 210–215 | 2 |
| 217–224 | 220 | 4½ | 2½ | 35½ | 22.0 | 220 | 2½ |
| 224–231 | 225 | 5 | 3 | 36 | 22.5 | 225 | 3 |
| 231–237 | 230 | 5½ | 3½ | 36½–37 | 23.0 | 230 | 3½ |
| 237–244 | 235 | 6 | 4 | 37 | 23.5 | 235 | 4 |
| 244–251 | 245 | 6½ | 4½ | 37½–38 | 24.0 | 240 | 4½ |
| 248–255 | 250 | 7 | 5 | 38 | 24.5 | 245 | 5 |
| 255–261 | 255 | 7½ | 5½ | 38½–39 | 25.0 | 250 | 5½ |
| 261–268 | 260 | 8 | 6 | 39 | 25.5 | 255 | 6 |
| 268–274 | 270 | 8½ | 6½ | 39½–40 | 26.0 | 260 | 6½ |
| 278–284 | 275 | 9 | 7 | 40 | 26.5 | 265 | 7 |
| 284–291 | 285 | 9½ | 7½ | 40½–41 | 27.0 | 270 | 7½ |
| 291–298 | 290 | 10 | 8 | 41 | 27.5 | 275 | 8 |
| 298–304 | 295 | 10½ | 8½ | 41½–42 | 28.0 | 280 | 8½ |
| 304–311 | 300 | 11 | 9 | 42 | 28.5 | 285 | 9 |
Men's Shoe Size Conversion Chart
| Foot Length (mm) | Mondopoint | US Men's | UK Men's | EU | Japan (cm) | Korea (mm) | AU / India |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 237–244 | 240 | 5 | 4 | 37–38 | 24.0 | 240 | 4 |
| 244–251 | 245 | 5½ | 4½ | 38 | 24.5 | 245 | 4½ |
| 251–258 | 250 | 6 | 5 | 38½–39 | 25.0 | 250 | 5 |
| 258–264 | 255 | 6½ | 5½ | 39 | 25.5 | 255 | 5½ |
| 264–271 | 260 | 7 | 6 | 40 | 26.0 | 260 | 6 |
| 271–278 | 270 | 7½ | 6½ | 40½ | 26.5 | 265 | 6½ |
| 278–284 | 275 | 8 | 7 | 41 | 27.0 | 270 | 7 |
| 284–291 | 280 | 8½ | 7½ | 41½–42 | 27.5 | 275 | 7½ |
| 291–298 | 285 | 9 | 8 | 42–43 | 28.0 | 280 | 8 |
| 298–304 | 295 | 9½ | 8½ | 43 | 28.5 | 285 | 8½ |
| 304–311 | 300 | 10 | 9 | 43½–44 | 29.0 | 290 | 9 |
| 311–318 | 305 | 10½ | 9½ | 44 | 29.5 | 295 | 9½ |
| 318–324 | 315 | 11 | 10 | 45 | 30.0 | 300 | 10 |
| 324–331 | 320 | 11½ | 10½ | 45½–46 | 30.5 | 305 | 10½ |
| 331–338 | 330 | 12 | 11 | 46 | 31.0 | 310 | 11 |
| 338–344 | 335 | 12½ | 11½ | 46½–47 | 31.5 | 315 | 11½ |
| 344–351 | 345 | 13 | 12 | 47–48 | 32.0 | 320 | 12 |
Source: Values derived from ISO 19407:2023 and ISO 9407:2019. EU sizes can span half-size ranges because EU increments (6.67mm Paris Points) are smaller than US/UK increments (8.47mm barleycorns). Always cross-reference against the specific brand's published size chart — particularly for EU conversions where the range spans two sizes. India uses UK sizing directly; Indian sizes match UK sizes exactly. Australia uses UK sizing with the same numerical values.
Shoe Sizing Systems Explained — US, UK, EU, Japan, Korea, India, Australia
Japan's Mondopoint system is actually the most honest of all: it's just your foot length in centimetres. No multiplier, no offset, no historical unit. A Japanese size 27 means a 27cm foot. If every country used this, shoe shopping across borders would be trivially simple. The EU Paris Point and the US barleycorn systems have survived purely through retail inertia.
US Shoe Sizing
The American shoe sizing system uses barleycorn units (1/3 inch / 8.47mm per size) and differs between men's and women's. Men's sizes run one higher than UK; women's sizes run two higher. Half sizes are standard. The US system also has a width coding system: for women, B is narrow and D is wide; for men, D is standard and 2E or 4E are wide widths. The Brannock Device — the metal foot measuring tool found in shoe shops — was invented in 1925 and remains the professional US measuring standard. US sizing is, genuinely, one of the more confusing systems for international shoppers, largely because the gender-based split means the same number means two different foot lengths.
UK Shoe Sizing
The UK system uses the same barleycorn increments as US but starts from a different reference point — giving the consistent one-size offset for men (US = UK + 1) and two-size offset for women (US women's = UK + 2). Unlike the US, the UK scale doesn't split by gender. One number, one scale, no gender offset. Australia, New Zealand, and India all follow the same UK conventions. So if you're wondering how to convert shoe size from US to UK: for men, subtract 1. For women, subtract 2. That's the whole formula.
EU Shoe Sizing
The European system is based on Paris Points — one Paris Point equals 2/3 of a centimetre (6.67mm). Since this increment is smaller than the US/UK barleycorn (8.47mm), a single US/UK size can cover one and a half EU sizes. This is why EU conversions are expressed as ranges (EU 42–43 for a US 9) rather than single numbers at certain foot lengths. On paper, this conversion works. In practice, it means you sometimes end up between two EU sizes — and the right one depends entirely on which brand's last you're wearing. Many European brands produce half EU sizes to handle exactly this situation. Always verify against the brand's own CM chart rather than relying on a generic conversion table, particularly at half-size boundaries.
Mondopoint — Japan, Korea, China
Mondopoint (ISO 9407:2019) expresses shoe size as foot length in millimetres or centimetres. Japan uses centimetres (27.0 = 270mm); South Korea and China use millimetres (270). This is genuinely the most rational system of the lot — the number is your actual foot measurement, no offset, no conversion formula. Footwear specialists consistently recommend using CM as your cross-brand reference because it sidesteps the US/UK/EU arithmetic entirely. If you need a cm to shoe size calculator specifically, this is the section to bookmark: your Japanese size is your foot length in cm, and your Korean size is that same number in mm.
Indian Shoe Sizing
India uses UK shoe sizing directly — so if you already know your UK size, you know your Indian size. An Indian size 7 is a UK 7. Major Indian footwear brands — Bata India, Liberty, Metro Shoes, Woodland — all use UK conventions. International brands sold in India (Nike, Adidas, New Balance) use their standard US or EU sizing with conversion charts. For online shopping on Myntra or Flipkart, UK sizing is the reference standard. This shoe size calculator outputs Indian size alongside UK since the numbers are identical — no separate calculation needed.
Australian Shoe Sizing
Australia uses UK shoe sizing conventions with the same numerical values. An AU 8 and a UK 8 are the same size. The only complexity arises from US brands, which may label the Australian market product in US sizes — requiring the standard one-size (men's) or two-size (women's) adjustment. New Zealand and South Africa use the same UK/Australian conventions.
Most Common Shoe Sizes — Where Most Feet Fall
Something that surprises people: the "average" shoe size has shifted noticeably over two generations. US men's average was around 9 in the 1970s; it's closer to 10–10.5 today. Women's average has moved from about 7 to 8.5. Retailers who haven't updated their stock ratios still run out of sizes 9.5–11 fastest — which is why those sizes often sell out first online.
Approximate distribution of US men's and women's shoe sales. Based on retail industry data — reflects what sells, not necessarily what the population needs.
WOMEN'S DISTRIBUTION
MEN'S DISTRIBUTION
Brand-Specific Shoe Sizing Guide — Nike, Adidas, Converse, New Balance & More
I've watched this cause a full-size return more times than I can count: someone buys Nike in their usual size, finds them too tight, then orders the same size in Converse thinking it's the same. Converse runs a full size large; Nike runs half a size small. The combined error is 1.5 sizes. The rule is simple: always go back to your foot length in cm, not your "usual size in another brand."
Your calculated shoe size is the starting point — not the final answer. Every brand uses a slightly different last (the internal foot-shaped mould), and this creates real, measurable differences in how shoes from different brands fit at the same nominal size. You'd expect a US 10 to be a US 10 everywhere. It isn't. The golden rule recommended by footwear fitting specialists: use your CM/Mondopoint foot length as your cross-brand reference, because it represents your actual foot rather than an abstract scale position. This is where most people mess up when shopping online — they convert their existing brand's size instead of going back to the raw foot measurement.
For brand-specific conversions, the Nike Shoe Size Converter handles Nike-to-international conversions with model-specific notes, and the Nike to Adidas Size Converter accounts for the documented half-size difference between those two brands. For UK and EU cross-system shopping, the UK to US Shoe Size Converter and EU to UK Shoe Size Converter target those specific lookups.
Which Sizing System Works Where — Coverage Chart
Different sizing systems work well in some contexts and poorly in others. Here's a quick breakdown — useful to know before you start converting between systems you haven't used before.
| Sizing System | US Online Shopping | UK / AU In-Store | EU Brands | Japanese Brands | Cross-Brand Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| US Size | ✓ Yes | Partial (+1M / +2W) | Partial (rounding gap) | ✗ No | Partial (brand variation) |
| UK Size | Partial (−1M / −2W) | ✓ Yes | Partial (rounding gap) | ✗ No | Partial (brand variation) |
| EU Size | Partial (rounding) | Partial (rounding) | ✓ Yes | ✗ No | Partial (rounding) |
| Mondopoint / CM | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✓ Best option |
| Japanese (cm) | ✗ No | ✗ No | ✗ No | ✓ Yes | Via Mondopoint |
| Korean (mm) | ✗ No | ✗ No | ✗ No | ✓ Yes (same as JP) | Via Mondopoint |
| ▶ Verdict: Best for US brands: US size. | Best for EU/European brands: EU size + verify half-size. | Best for Japanese/Korean brands: CM/Mondopoint directly. | Most universally reliable: Mondopoint (foot length in cm/mm) — works with every brand's own size chart, eliminates arithmetic errors. | |||||
⚠️ "Partial" ratings reflect situations where conversion produces correct results most of the time but occasional half-size discrepancies occur due to scale increment mismatches. Mondopoint is rated "Yes" for US and UK because any brand using those systems publishes a CM chart that Mondopoint maps directly onto.
📏 Practical Fit & Care Notes — Getting the Most from Your Shoes
- TIMING Measure feet in the afternoon. Feet swell during the day — by late afternoon they can be 3–5mm longer than a morning measurement. That difference equals approximately half a shoe size. Shoes bought in the morning may feel tight by evening. Always try on shoes, or take your measurements, later in the day.
- SOCKS Wear the socks you plan to use. Running socks, hiking socks, and dress socks have meaningfully different thicknesses. A shoe that fits over a thin dress sock may be too tight with a cushioned running sock. Bring your intended socks when fitting shoes in-store, or factor in sock thickness when ordering online.
- TOE ROOM A thumb's width at the toe is the professional standard. Press your thumb firmly into the end of the shoe. If you can fit a thumb's width between your longest toe and the end of the shoe, the length is correct. Less than that risks nail damage and blisters during extended wear. More than one thumb's width and the shoe is too long, causing your foot to slide forward and your heel to lift out.
- WIDTH Width is as important as length. A shoe that fits in length but squeezes the ball of the foot will cause bunions, corns, and hammertoe deformity over time. Most people size up in length to fix a width problem — that's not the right fix. It gives you a longer shoe that still squeezes in the same place. If the sides of your foot are pressing visibly against the upper, the width is insufficient. New Balance is the only major athletic brand that routinely offers multiple width options at retail.
- HEEL The heel should not slip. A correctly fitting shoe holds the heel firmly with no vertical movement when walking. Slight slipping during break-in of leather shoes is acceptable; persistent heel slip in athletic shoes means the shoe is too large. If you've ever developed a blister exactly on the back of your heel after a long walk — that's the shoe moving against your skin because the fit is too loose. A heel grip insert helps slightly, but it's not a substitute for the right size.
- CARE Rotate shoes between wears. Shoes need 24 hours to dry and decompress after wearing. Rotating between two or three pairs extends the lifespan of each pair significantly and reduces odour. For leather shoes, use cedar shoe trees to maintain shape and absorb moisture. For athletic shoes, remove insoles and leave tongue open to air dry after every run or workout.
- CLEANING Clean based on material. Leather: wipe with a damp cloth, condition with leather balm every 2–3 months. Canvas: machine wash in a mesh bag at 30°C, air dry. Suede: brush with a suede brush only — never use water. Knit/mesh uppers: hand wash with mild soap and cool water, squeeze gently, air dry. Never tumble dry any shoe — heat degrades glue bonds and deforms midsoles.
Related Sizing Tools
Shoe sizing is one dimension of a complete size picture. These tools extend the same precision approach to every other measurement:
- For a general cross-system conversion from any foot length, the Shoe Size Converter handles all international systems simultaneously. The Sneaker Size Converter applies the same logic with a focus on athletic footwear.
- For brand-to-brand conversions, the Nike Shoe Size Converter handles Nike-to-international with model notes, and the Nike to Adidas Size Converter accounts for the documented half-size gap between those two brands specifically.
- For cross-country conversions, the UK to US Shoe Size Converter and EU to UK Shoe Size Converter target those specific lookups.
- Body measurement tools: The Body Measurement Calculator extends the same measurement precision to the full body.
- Other accessories: Complete your sizing picture with the Ring Size Calculator — both use the same measurement-based approach.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I measure my foot for shoe size?
Place a piece of paper on a hard floor against a wall. Stand with your heel against the wall, weight evenly distributed. Trace around your foot with a pencil held straight — not angled. Mark the tip of your longest toe. Measure from the wall to that mark in centimetres. That is your foot length in centimetres — enter it directly into the shoe size calculator. Always measure both feet in the afternoon, and use the larger measurement.
What is the difference between US men's and US women's shoe sizes?
US men's and women's sizes represent different foot lengths at the same number. A US women's 8 is approximately equivalent to a US men's 6.5 — both correspond to the same physical foot length (approximately 251–258mm). The women's scale is offset from the men's by approximately 1.5–2 sizes. This is why the shoe size calculator outputs both men's and women's US sizes from a single foot length measurement — the same foot is described by different numbers depending on which scale you use.
How do UK and EU shoe sizes differ from US?
UK sizes run one smaller than US men's sizes and two smaller than US women's sizes — a US men's 10 is a UK 9, and a US women's 10 is approximately a UK 8. EU sizes use Paris Points (6.67mm per size) rather than barleycorns (8.47mm per size), making their increments smaller. This means one US or UK size spans 1.2–1.5 EU sizes — which is why EU conversions are expressed as ranges (EU 42–43) rather than single numbers at certain foot lengths. For EU brands, always cross-check against the brand's own CM chart rather than relying on a conversion table alone.
Do Nike shoes run small? How much should I size up?
Yes, Nike performance shoes run smaller than standard sizing. For running shoes like the Pegasus, React, and Free lines, sizing up half a US size from your standard size is the most commonly reported solution. The Air Force 1 and Dunk are exceptions — they run true to size or slightly large due to their heritage basketball last, which was designed with more toe room. When buying Nike online without trying them on, use Nike's CM size chart and compare your foot length directly rather than relying on US size conversion from another brand.
How do I convert my shoe size for Japanese or Korean brands?
Both Japan and South Korea use Mondopoint — foot length in cm (Japan) or mm (Korea). Your Japanese size is your foot length in centimetres: 27.0 cm foot = Japanese size 27.0. Your Korean size is that measurement in millimetres: 270. One important note: Japanese athletic brands (ASICS Japan, Onitsuka Tiger) tend to use their domestic sizing, which is simply your foot length in cm — more accurate than converting from a US or EU size.
What happens if I'm between shoe sizes?
If your foot measurement falls between two whole sizes, round up — not down. Shoes that are slightly too small cause blisters, nail damage, and toe deformity with prolonged wear. Shoes that are slightly too large can be compensated with thicker socks, an insole, or a heel grip. Not ideal solutions, but all preferable to compressed toes. Quick tip: most people find they're between sizes because they measured in the morning. Measure again in the afternoon — feet swell enough during the day that you may land cleanly in one size. The only exception is canvas shoes like Vans and Converse, where going up a half size tends to cause heel slip — thicker socks are the better fix there.
Can I wash my trainers/sneakers in a washing machine?
Most fabric-upper trainers (canvas, mesh, knit) can be machine washed at 30°C on a gentle cycle, placed inside a mesh laundry bag with the laces removed. Remove insoles and wash them separately by hand. Do not tumble dry — heat degrades the adhesive bonds holding the sole to the upper and can deform foam midsoles permanently. Air dry away from direct heat. Leather, suede, and nubuck shoes should never go in the washing machine — clean leather with a damp cloth and conditioner, suede with a dry suede brush only.
What shoe size is 26cm, 27cm or 28cm?
26cm (260mm) is approximately US Men 8 / US Women 9 / UK 7 / EU 41. 27cm (270mm) is approximately US Men 9 / US Women 10 / UK 8 / EU 42. 28cm (280mm) is approximately US Men 10 / US Women 11 / UK 9 / EU 43. These are Mondopoint values — the most internationally reliable system.
How much bigger is the next shoe size up?
In US and UK systems, each full size is approximately 8.47mm (one barleycorn). A half size is approximately 4.23mm. EU sizes use the Paris Point (6.67mm per step), so each EU step is slightly smaller than a US full size. In practice: going up one US full size adds about 8–9mm of internal shoe length.
My left and right feet are different sizes. Which size should I buy?
Over 60% of people have a measurable difference between their two feet. Always buy for the larger foot. A shoe slightly long on the smaller foot is far more comfortable than one too short on the larger. Use an insole on the smaller side if needed. Enter both feet into this calculator and use the larger result.
What is the difference between men's and women's shoe sizes?
US women's sizes run approximately 1.5 sizes higher than men's for the same foot length. A US Men 9 fits roughly the same 270mm foot as a US Women 10.5. UK and EU are unisex by number. Women's lasts are typically cut narrower, which is why some women prefer men's widths in certain styles.
How do I find my Nike size vs Adidas?
Nike runs approximately half a size small; Adidas is true to size. Nike US 10 → try Adidas US 9.5 or 10. Adidas US 10 → try Nike US 10.5. Use the brand-to-brand converter on this page for simultaneous results across all 10 major brands.
I know my shoe size in the US — what is it in India and Australia?
India uses UK shoe sizing directly — subtract 1 from your US men's size to get your Indian size (US men's 10 = Indian 9), or subtract 2 from your US women's size (US women's 8 = Indian 6). Australia uses the same UK sizing conventions, so the same conversions apply. For example, a US men's 10 = UK 9 = Indian 9 = Australian 9. For Australian women's sizing, a US women's 8 = UK 6 = Australian 6. The Shoe Size Converter handles all of these lookups simultaneously from a single input.
Scientific Sources & References
The sources below are the same ones this calculator's formulas are derived from. If you're comparing against a competitor's tool, ask them for their methodology source — most don't have one.
All sources below are real, peer-reviewed publications or official institutional standards with working links verified at time of writing.
📖 What This Guide Doesn't Cover — And Should
This guide focuses on standard adult shoe sizing for street, lifestyle, and athletic shoes. It does not cover ski boot sizing in depth — ski boots use Mondopoint as their primary system but with additional considerations around shell fit, liner compression, and forward lean that make standard Mondopoint conversion insufficient for a proper ski boot purchase. Ski boot sizing requires in-person professional fitting.
The guide also does not address orthopedic or therapeutic shoe sizing, where foot pathology (bunions, hammertoes, diabetic neuropathy, post-surgical reconstruction) requires specialised last shapes and fitting protocols that go beyond standard size charts. If you have a foot condition affecting fit, a podiatrist or orthotist assessment is the appropriate starting point — not a size calculator.
Not finding what you need?
This calculator covers US, UK, EU, Japan, Korea, Australia, India, China and Mondopoint across men’s, women’s and kids’ sizing. It includes brand-to-brand conversion for 10 major brands, plus adjustments for occasion, sock thickness, arch type, foot volume, and age-related changes. Arch-type adjustments (flat arch: +2mm, high arch: −2mm) are based on NHANES population data and APMA fitting guidelines from the American Podiatric Medical Association.
If you need a specific conversion not listed here — Brannock reading to EU, half-sizes in Korean brand formats, or kids’ EU-to-US crossover — use the contact form and we’ll add it to the next update.