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when should babies start wearing shoes

Babies usually do not need real shoes until they are actually walking confidently, mainly outdoors.

The simple answer

  • For non-walking babies (newborn to around 9–12 months): stick to bare feet or soft socks/booties for warmth and protection.
  • Start true “first shoes” when your baby is pulling up, cruising, and especially walking outside on rough, cold, or dirty surfaces, often between about 9 and 18 months.
  • Indoors, even for early walkers, barefoot (or grippy socks) is usually best for healthy foot development and balance.

Why waiting is better for feet

Babies are born with soft, developing bones, lots of fat padding, and no defined arch yet. Walking and standing barefoot helps:

  • Strengthen foot and leg muscles
  • Improve balance, posture, and coordination
  • Let toes spread naturally for proper alignment

Experts in pediatrics and pediatric orthopedics highlight that optimum foot development happens in a barefoot or “barefoot-like” environment, and stiff, tight, or “supportive” shoes can actually weaken feet or restrict natural movement.

When and what kind of shoes to choose

Once your baby is really on the move and needs protection outside, switch from just socks to very soft, flexible shoes. Good first shoes should be:

  • Lightweight and flexible (you should be able to bend the sole easily)
  • Wide at the toes so they can wiggle and spread
  • Flat (no heel or built-in arch support)
  • Made of soft, breathable material
  • Non-slip sole for grip

Many pediatric and podiatry sources recommend “barefoot-style” shoes (thin, flexible soles, roomy toe box) at least until age 3 while the foot structure and arch are still developing.

Hard-soled shoes

  • Often not recommended until a child has been walking confidently for a while (for example, 6 weeks or more of solid independent walking), and even then only when needed for terrain or weather.
  • Even later in childhood, flexible, non-restrictive shoes are preferred to stiff, rigid ones.

Forum and real‑world parent discussions

On parent forums, you’ll see a wide range of behavior:

  • Some parents buy cute shoes around 3–5 months purely for photos or outfits, but mostly use them briefly and not for standing or walking.
  • Many evidence‑focused parents say they waited until their child was actively walking outside, then went for soft, barefoot-style shoes, and continued prioritizing wide, flexible footwear through toddler years.

A common compromise:

Indoors: barefoot or grippy socks. Outdoors on rough ground: soft, flexible shoes.

Practical age‑by‑stage guide

These are typical ranges, not strict rules. Always adjust for your baby’s development and climate.

  • 0–6 months:
    • No shoes needed.
    • Use socks or soft booties only for warmth or sun protection.
  • 6–12 months (crawling, pulling up):
    • Barefoot as much as possible on safe surfaces.
    • Grippy socks or soft booties if floors are cold or slippery.
  • Around 9–18 months (early walking):
    • Barefoot indoors so they can feel the floor and learn balance.
* Soft, flexible shoes outside or on uneven/dirty/hot/cold surfaces.
  • After confident walking:
    • Continue with flexible, flat, wide shoes—think “barefoot but protected,” not stiff “supportive” trainers.

If you ever notice persistent toe-walking, severe flat feet with pain, one foot turning in or out more than the other, or frequent tripping, it is smart to check in with your pediatrician or a pediatric podiatrist or physiotherapist.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.