What is bunion?
A bunion (hallux valgus) is a bony deformity at the base of the big toe — the joint enlarges and the toe angles toward the other toes. Affects about 23% of adults aged 18–65 and 36% over 65.
Most bunions can be managed conservatively. Severe pain, deformity, or interference with walking may require surgical correction.
Do I have bunion? Common signs
If most of these describe what you're experiencing, telehealth may be a good next step:
What causes it
Genetic predisposition (main factor), tight or narrow shoes, high heels worsen it, flat feet, certain inflammatory conditions (rheumatoid arthritis).
Is it contagious?
No.
Bunions are mostly inherited — but tight shoes definitely accelerate the deformity. Comfortable wide shoes don't reverse it but slow it.
Can it be treated online?
Routine bunion is well-suited to telehealth advice. Severe pain not responding to conservative care, advanced deformity, surgical candidates — benefit from in-person podiatry/orthopedics.
How bunion is treated
Conservative first. Wider shoes with soft uppers. Bunion pads or splints. Toe spacers between first and second toe. NSAIDs for pain. Foot stretches. Custom orthotics for foot mechanics. Corticosteroid injection for severe pain (rare). Surgical correction (osteotomy) for severe cases.
Self-care while you wait
- Wide-toed shoes — no pointed or narrow toe boxes
- Soft uppers (leather stretches; cloth conforms)
- Avoid high heels
- Toe spacers between big toe and second toe
- Bunion pads to cushion
- Stretches: pull big toe gently away from others
- Lose excess weight
- Foot exercises (towel scrunches, marble pickup)
How long does it last?
Bony deformity is structural and persists. Pain and inflammation often manageable conservatively.
Frequently asked questions
Will bunion splints fix the deformity?
No — splints don't reverse bony change. They may reduce pain and slow progression.
Should I have surgery?
For severe pain limiting walking, after conservative treatment failure. Surgery is significant — 6 weeks to 6 months recovery.
Can I exercise with a bunion?
Yes — low-impact activities, supportive shoes. Avoid pivoting/turning sports if painful.
Do I really need to give up my heels?
High heels accelerate progression. Limited use for special occasions OK; daily wear isn't.
Are bunion correctors any good?
Mixed evidence for splints/pads. Won't fix bony deformity but may improve comfort.


