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    Home»Workouts»11 Plantar Fasciitis Exercises Your Achy Feet Are Begging For
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    11 Plantar Fasciitis Exercises Your Achy Feet Are Begging For

    By September 3, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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    11 Plantar Fasciitis Exercises Your Achy Feet Are Begging For
    Katie Thompson

    1. Bent-Leg Calf Stretch

    • Start in a staggered position with your left leg several feet in front of your right leg. Bend your left knee and hinge forward slightly so most of your weight rests on your left leg. Plant your right firmly on the ground.
    • Softly bend your right knee to feel a stretch in the lower part of the right calf. Hold for 30 seconds, then switch sides. Repeat for 3 total rounds.

    This stretch targets the soleus, your lower calf muscle, which you target with the bent-knee positioning. Tightness there can contribute to plantar fasciitis by limiting how much shock those muscles are able to absorb when you walk or run; that shock can then get redirected to the plantar fascia. By loosening tight calves, you can reduce stress placed on the plantar fascia. To complement this move, after you’ve done reps and sets on a bent leg, do a straight leg calf stretch where you get into the same positioning but keep the back leg straight. That will target the gastrocnemius, your upper calf muscle.

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    Tight. Achy. Sharp. Stabbing. There are lots of unpleasant terms that describe pain on the bottom of your foot. Luckily, plantar fasciitis exercises can go a long way in relieving that discomfort. In fact, strength moves and stretches are a really effective way to treat this common condition, making at-home relief a reality.

    It sucks to have PF, but if you’ve been plagued by it, you’re definitely not alone: Millions of Americans wrestle with heel pain every year, and plantar fasciitis is the most common cause. We tapped a physical therapist and a podiatrist for a primer on all things plantar fasciitis, including what it is, what causes it, and most crucially, what specific exercises can bring you—and your barking tootsies—a much-deserved break.

    So what even is plantar fasciitis, and what causes it?

    First, let’s start with the plantar fascia: It’s a band of tissue on the bottom of your foot that extends from the heel all the way up to your toes, splaying out as it reaches the top, Winnie Yu, PT, DPT, CSCS, a NYC-based physical therapist and strength coach at Bespoke Physical Therapy, tells SELF. The plantar fascia helps absorb shock when you walk, run, and perform high-impact activities like jumping. It also supports the arch of the foot, though that’s not its primary job, Dr. Yu explains.

    So what is plantar fasciitis? Well, it’s when this tissue gets overloaded and becomes inflamed and painful as a result. You can stress your fascia by doing too much exercise on your forefoot, Stephen M. Pribut, DPM., a Washington DC–based podiatrist and affiliated faculty with the biomedical engineering department at George Washington University, tells SELF. Think: jumping jacks, hill sprints, and bounding on a trampoline, since those motions can overload the area, as well as suddenly ramping up a walking or running program without giving your body enough time to recover, he adds.

    Tightness in the calves can be another culprit, since that muscle group is attached to your heel, which means extra tension there can yank on the plantar fascia, Dr. Yu explains. Beyond that, running or walking uphill and moving on uneven surfaces can place extra stress on the tissue, and specific foot anatomy can play a role too: Folks with flat feet or high arches can walk in patterns that overload the plantar fascia, as SELF previously reported.

    As for how it feels, there’s one often-cited hallmark: “It may start off as a sharp pain that’s present in the first couple steps in the morning,” Dr. Yu explains. From there, it can progress to pain felt every time you get up after being sedentary for a while. And in severe cases, it can hurt every time you take a step, causing you to limp when you walk, Dr. Pribut says.

    What’s the best way to treat plantar fasciitis?

    When you have plantar fasciitis, the bottom of your foot often feels suuuper tight. “Your natural inclination is to want to stretch it because it feels so freaking restricted,” Dr. Yu says. That reaction isn’t wrong—in fact, stretching your calves, as well as the tissue itself, “is very beneficial,” Dr. Yu says. That’s because by easing tightness in and around the plantar fascia, you can reduce stress on the tissue. However, stretching is not the only approach.

    Achy Begging Exercises Fasciitis Feet Plantar
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