Is It Best to See a Podiatrist or a Physiotherapist for Plantar Fasciitis?
Ben Leyson
December 9, 2025
Is It Best to See a Podiatrist or a Physiotherapist for Plantar Fasciitis?
When plantar fasciitis strikes, most people have one big question. Should they see a podiatrist or a physiotherapist? Both professions treat foot pain, both are highly trained, and both can play a role in recovery. But they do not approach the problem in the same way. To understand which practitioner is best for plantar fasciitis, it helps to look closely at what the condition actually is, why it develops and what kind of treatment produces lasting results rather than temporary relief.
My book Plantar Fascia Freedom makes something very clear early on. Plantar fasciitis is rarely just a foot problem. It is a whole body movement problem that affects how the foot, ankle, knee and hip work together. The pain is in the fascia, but the cause is usually somewhere else in the chain. Because of this, the most effective care is the care that restores natural movement, strengthens the weak links and reduces the mechanical overload that created the pain in the first place.
To decide whether a podiatrist or a physiotherapist is the better choice, we need to understand how each profession typically treats plantar fascia pain.
How Podiatrists Commonly Treat Plantar Fasciitis
Podiatrists are experts in foot structure, footwear and orthotic devices. Their training focuses on the anatomy and mechanics of the foot itself, and many people turn to podiatrists first because plantar fasciitis feels like a problem isolated to the heel or arch.
A podiatrist may provide:
• Orthotics or insoles
• Footwear recommendations
• Taping
• Shockwave therapy
• Temporary offloading strategies
• Cortisone injections (depending on scope and region)
• Advice on load modification
These treatments can be useful, particularly in the short term. Your book explains that support such as taping can reduce strain on the fascia and calm symptoms in the early weeks. However, podiatry care often focuses heavily on the foot alone. Many podiatry approaches do not address hip mobility, shin strength, big toe extension, ankle stiffness or the movement patterns that overload the fascia repeatedly. This is where podiatry alone can fall short. The pain may settle temporarily, but the underlying dysfunction often remains, causing symptoms to return once the support is removed.
Orthotics can help some people walk with less pain, but long term dependence on them can sometimes worsen weakness in the foot muscles, especially if the root cause is actually coming from higher up the chain. This is why your book emphasises that plantar fascia pain is not solved by “quick fixes” like cushioning or injections. Relief is different from correction.
How Physiotherapists Like Ben Treat Plantar Fasciitis
Good physiotherapy approaches plantar fasciitis very differently. Instead of focusing only on the foot, physiotherapists assess the entire lower limb to discover where movement has broken down.
My book describes a physiotherapy model built around three phases:
Pain relief
Rehabilitation
Maintenance
This system focuses on restoring mobility, strength and coordination through the whole foot–ankle–hip chain. Physiotherapists can:
• Reduce pain through soft tissue work, taping and targeted exercises
• Assess hip mobility, ankle mobility, shin strength and balance
• Identify the exact weaknesses causing the overload
• Prescribe corrective exercises based on test failures
• Rebuild load tolerance in the fascia
• Improve walking mechanics
• Guide footwear transitions safely
• Prevent recurrence through long term strength and movement training
This is important because plantar fascia pain is a mechanical overload issue. If the hip does not move, the foot collapses. If the big toe is stiff, the fascia is forced to take extra strain. If the shin muscles are weak, shock is transferred directly into the fascia. If the ankle is stiff, the fascia absorbs more load with every step. Physiotherapy directly targets these dysfunctions.
In my book, I explain that clinical-style tests such as the hip flexor test, the big toe extension test, the hip external rotation test, the single-leg balance test and the shin strength test reveal exactly where each individual is breaking down. Once that is identified, you prescribe specific exercises to fix each problem rather than using generic stretching routines. This is physiotherapy at its most effective: personalised, logical and aimed at long term change.
Why Physiotherapy Often Outperforms Podiatry for Plantar Fasciitis
Both professions can help. But physiotherapy tends to outperform podiatry for plantar fasciitis when it comes to long term results. There are three major reasons for this.
1. Plantar fasciitis is rarely caused by the foot alone
My book explains this repeatedly. The fascia becomes overloaded because something else in the chain is not doing its job. Often this is the hip, calf, ankle or even the big toe. Treating the foot without treating the system is like replacing a tyre on a car with bad suspension. The pain goes, then comes back.
2. Physiotherapy builds resilience, not dependence
Orthotics, injections and passive treatments create a model where the patient depends on something external to feel better. Physiotherapy creates independence by improving movement, strength and coordination. By the end of your program, people no longer need expensive devices because their body itself has become strong and functional enough to walk pain free.
3. Physiotherapy prevents recurrence by fixing the root cause
This is the biggest difference. The correct tests identify precisely why the fascia was inflamed, and the exercises rebuild function so the problem does not return. Your book says clearly that plantar fascia recovery succeeds when you relieve pain, rebuild movement and maintain the improvements. This is the exact structure of physiotherapy rehabilitation.
The Best Approach: A Physiotherapist Who Understands the Whole Body
The most effective care for plantar fasciitis is physiotherapy that follows a structured, whole body method like the one outlined in your book. This approach:
• Reduces pain quickly
• Restores movement through the entire chain
• Identifies and corrects weakness
• Strengthens the fascia
• Rebuilds natural movement patterns
• Prevents recurrence
This is the kind of physiotherapy that produces lasting results rather than temporary relief. It is the approach that consistently helps people walk pain free again and stay that way.