Flat Feet and Overpronation: How Physiotherapy Corrects Your Gait
Flat feet and overpronation are among the most common structural foot conditions in India, and flat feet physiotherapy is one of the most effective tools available to manage them, yet most people either ignore the condition entirely or reach for an insole without ever addressing the underlying mechanics.
Flat feet are not always painful, but when they are, the pain rarely stays in the foot alone. Overpronation alters the alignment of the entire lower limb, triggering a chain of compensatory loading patterns that can cause heel pain, inner knee ache, shin soreness, and even hip and lower back discomfort. For many patients, the foot is the origin of a problem that has been wrongly treated further up the body for years.
This blog covers what flat feet and overpronation actually are, how they affect gait and the rest of the lower limb, and what a structured physiotherapy programme involves, from foot arch strengthening exercises to gait retraining. It also directly addresses the insoles versus physiotherapy debate, where the evidence sits, and what the right combination looks like.
What Are Flat Feet and Overpronation?
Flat feet, clinically known as pes planus, occur when the medial longitudinal arch of the foot collapses toward the ground, reducing or eliminating the space between the inner foot and the floor during standing. The foot’s arch functions as a dynamic shock absorber, distributing body weight and managing ground reaction forces with each step. When the arch is reduced, that load distribution changes.
Overpronation describes what happens during movement. Pronation is a normal, necessary rolling inward of the foot at heel strike. The problem arises when this motion is excessive or prolonged, leading the foot to roll too far inward and the arch to fail to resupinate adequately before the next step. Not all flat feet cause overpronation, and not all overpronators have visibly flat arches. They frequently coexist, and together they create a pattern of loading that the body is not designed to sustain over millions of steps.
Two broad categories exist:
- Flexible flat feet: Arch is present when non-weight-bearing, but collapses under load. This is the most common type and the most responsive to physiotherapy and exercise.
- Rigid flat feet: Arch is absent even when non-weight-bearing. Often structural or congenital in origin, more likely to require orthotic support, and less amenable to exercise-based correction alone.
Flat Feet, Knee Pain, and the Kinetic Chain
The foot is the foundation of every weight-bearing movement. When the arch collapses, and the foot overpronates, the shin bone internally rotates excessively with each step. This internal tibial rotation drives the knee inward, loading the medial compartment of the knee joint and placing the kneecap in a mechanically disadvantaged position.
This is why flat feet knee pain is one of the most common presentations seen in physiotherapy clinics. A systematic review published in PMC (2019) found that foot pronation is significantly associated with patellofemoral pain syndrome, with overpronating patients showing greater medial knee stress and altered patellar tracking compared to neutral-foot individuals.
The kinetic chain effects extend beyond the knee:
- Hip and gluteal loading: Internal shin bone rotation forces the hip into compensatory adduction and internal rotation, reducing gluteal muscle efficiency.
- Lower back stress: Asymmetrical pronation, more common on one side, creates a functional leg-length discrepancy that can contribute to chronic lower back pain.
- Shin splints: Excessive shin bone rotation increases tensile load. Overload of these muscles is a leading cause of medial tibial stress syndrome.
Recognising Symptoms of Overpronation and Fallen Arches
Many people with flat feet are entirely asymptomatic and require no intervention. Symptoms that warrant physiotherapy assessment include:
- Heel and arch pain: Typically worst with the first few steps in the morning, characteristic of plantar fasciitis that commonly accompanies overpronation.
- Inner knee pain: A diffuse aching around the medial knee or under the kneecap, particularly on stairs, squatting, or after prolonged walking.
- Shin pain: A deep ache or tenderness along the inner border of the lower leg during or after activity.
- Foot and ankle fatigue: A heavy, tired sensation in the feet and calves after standing or walking for moderate periods.
- Toe deformities: Bunions and hammer toes develop progressively when chronic overpronation alters forefoot load distribution.
- Visible inward ankle roll: When viewed from behind, the Achilles tendon bows inward rather than tracking straight, a visible sign of excessive hindfoot valgus.
Plantar Fasciitis and Flat Feet: A Common Combination
Plantar fasciitis and flat feet frequently occur together because the mechanics of overpronation directly overload the plantar fascia. The plantar fascia is a thick band of connective tissue running from the heel to the metatarsal heads. It tightens during toe-off, creating the windlass mechanism that helps propel the body forward. When the arch is low, and the foot overpronates, the plantar fascia is under sustained tensile load for a greater proportion of each step, accumulating microdamage faster than the tissue can repair.
A meta-analysis found that individuals with flat feet have significantly greater plantar fascia strain during walking than those with normal arches. Overpronation treatment that addresses arch mechanics, therefore directly reduces plantar fascia load, making it one of the most clinically important reasons to treat flat feet proactively rather than waiting for symptoms to worsen.
Treating plantar fasciitis in patients with flat feet without addressing underlying foot mechanics is one of the most common reasons patients experience persistent or recurrent heel pain. The fascia heals, but the mechanical load that caused it remains.
Overpronation Insoles vs Physiotherapy: What the Evidence Says
The overpronation insoles vs physiotherapy debate is not really a debate at all, based on current evidence. Both have a role; they work through different mechanisms, and the research consistently supports combining them for symptomatic flat feet rather than choosing one over the other.
Foot orthotics and insoles passively support the arch by placing the foot in a more neutral position during weight-bearing. However, the benefit exists only while the orthotic is being worn. Remove the insole, and the arch collapses again.
Physiotherapy builds the muscular capacity that supports the arch independently. A 12-week intrinsic foot muscle strengthening programme produced measurable increases in arch height in adults with flexible flat feet.
| Factor | Orthotics / Insoles | Physiotherapy |
| Mechanism | External support that passively corrects pronation during weight-bearing | Active retraining of arch-supporting muscles and movement mechanics |
| Who benefits most | Patients with significant pain during activity, rigid flat feet, or while waiting for muscle strength to develop | Flexible flat feet, mild to moderate symptoms, patients with secondary knee or hip pain from gait faults |
| Long-term effect | Support lasts only while the orthotic is worn. Arch collapses on removal. | Builds intrinsic muscle capacity that remains after sessions end |
| Plantar fasciitis | Reduces tensile load on the plantar fascia short-term | Addresses the underlying mechanics driving plantar fascia overload |
| Cost and access | One-off cost, widely available | Requires a course of sessions; higher upfront time commitment |
| Best evidence | Good evidence for pain reduction in plantar fasciitis and flexible flat feet | Good evidence for gait improvement, knee pain reduction, and long-term arch function |
| Combined approach | Most research supports combining both for best outcomes, especially in symptomatic patients | Physiotherapy provides the functional gains; orthotics provide load management during rehabilitation |
Flat Feet Gait Correction: What Physiotherapy Actually Does
Flat feet gait correction through physiotherapy is not simply about strengthening the foot. It requires a whole-limb approach that addresses the foot, ankle, tibia, knee, hip, and movement patterns simultaneously, because overpronation is a movement problem as much as it is a structural one.
A physiotherapist working with a patient with flat feet and overpronation will assess and address:
- Foot posture and arch mobility: Distinguishing between flexible and rigid flat feet determines whether exercise-based correction is the primary treatment or whether orthotic support is needed alongside it.
- Subtalar and midfoot joint mobility: Restricted ankle dorsiflexion is a major driver of compensatory overpronation. Manual therapy to restore subtalar and talocrural joint mobility is often the first clinical priority.
- Tibialis posterior activation: Tibialis posterior is the primary dynamic arch supporter. Weakness or inhibition of this muscle is a central finding in symptomatic flat feet and must be directly targeted in rehabilitation.
- Hip abductor and external rotator strength: Weak glutes allow the femur to adduct and internally rotate, worsening knee valgus collapse. Strengthening the hip is as important as strengthening the foot in correcting overpronation gait.
- Running and walking mechanics: Video gait analysis identifies specific fault patterns: excessive foot flare, early heel rise, or medial knee collapse, that are then addressed through targeted cues and movement retraining.
Foot Arch Strengthening Exercises: Building Intrinsic Capacity
Foot arch-strengthening exercises work by activating and progressively loading the intrinsic foot muscles and the tibialis posterior, which are responsible for maintaining the arch under body weight. For flexible flat feet, a consistent programme of these exercises produces measurable improvements in arch height.
Intrinsic Foot Muscle Activation
- Short-foot exercise: Sit or stand, shorten the foot by drawing the metatarsal heads toward the heel without curling the toes.
- Towel scrunches: Sitting with the foot flat on a towel on the floor, scrunch the towel toward the heel using the toes and arch.
Fallen Arches Exercises: Tibialis Posterior Loading
- Resisted inversion with band: Sit with a resistance band around the forefoot, anchored to a point on the outer side. Move the foot inward (inversion) against the band resistance, hold 2 seconds, return slowly.
- Single-leg heel raise with arch emphasis: Standing on the affected foot, rise onto the ball of the foot while actively maintaining the arch by not allowing the ankle to collapse inward. The key is keeping the big toe in contact with the floor at the top of the movement.
- Tibialis posterior eccentric loading: Standing on the affected leg, lower the heel slowly off a step while allowing controlled pronation, then actively supinate before the heel drops fully.
Overpronation Treatment: Hip and Proximal Strengthening
- Clamshells: Lying on the side with hips at 45 degrees and knees bent, rotate the top knee upward while keeping the feet together. Perform 20 repetitions.
- Single-leg squat with knee alignment focus: Standing on one leg, lower slowly into a shallow squat while maintaining the knee over the second toe. Begin in front of a mirror for visual feedback.
- Hip external rotation with band: Place a resistance band just above the knees during bilateral or single-leg squat, which provides tactile feedback and resistance against internal rotation.
When Flat Feet Need Professional Assessment
Not every flat foot needs treatment. Seek physiotherapy assessment if:
- Pain in the heel, arch, inner knee, or shin has been present for more than 4 weeks and is limiting daily activity or sport.
- An insole has provided temporary relief, but symptoms return whenever it is removed.
- A visible inward collapse of the ankle is present during walking, running, or squatting.
- Lower back pain, hip pain, or knee pain has been attributed to flat feet or overpronation by a doctor.
- Symptoms are worsening despite rest and footwear changes.
Key Takeaways
- Flat feet affect 33% of Indian adults. They are not inherently painful, but when symptoms develop, the cause is typically overpronation, driving abnormal load through the foot, knee, hip, and lower back.
- Flexible flat feet respond well to physiotherapy. Rigid flat feet are more likely to require orthotics as primary support, with physiotherapy addressing secondary muscle imbalances.
- Flat feet knee pain occurs because overpronation causes tibial internal rotation, which drives the knee into valgus collapse, overloading the medial knee and patellofemoral joint.
- Plantar fasciitis and flat feet coexist frequently because overpronation puts the plantar fascia under sustained tensile load throughout each step. Treating the fascia without treating the mechanics leads to recurrence.
- Overpronation insoles vs physiotherapy is not an either/or decision. Orthotics manage pain and load during rehabilitation; physiotherapy builds the muscular capacity that enables independent arch support.
- Foot arch-strengthening exercises, including short foot, resisted inversion, single-leg heel raises, and tibialis posterior loading, produce measurable improvements in arch height in flexible flat feet over 8 to 12 weeks.
- Flat feet gait correction requires addressing the entire kinetic chain: foot intrinsics, tibialis posterior, ankle mobility, and gluteal strength, not the foot alone.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q1. Do flat feet always need treatment?
No. Many people with flat feet have no pain or functional limitation and require no intervention. Treatment is warranted when flat feet cause pain in the heel, arch, inner knee, or shin; when overpronation produces compensatory symptoms further up the kinetic chain; or when symptoms limit daily activity or sport.
Q2. Can flat feet be corrected permanently with physiotherapy?
Yes, for flexible flat feet in most cases. A consistent programme of foot arch-strengthening exercises and gait retraining produces measurable, lasting improvements in arch height. Rigid flat feet with a structural or congenital basis respond less completely to exercise alone and may require long-term orthotic support alongside physiotherapy.
Q3. Should I use insoles or do physiotherapy for overpronation?
Both in most symptomatic cases. Insoles reduce pain and manage load during the period when muscles are being rebuilt through physiotherapy. Physiotherapy addresses the underlying muscle weakness and movement faults that the insole cannot correct on its own. Using insoles alone, without physiotherapy, means symptoms return whenever the insoles are removed.
Q4. Can flat feet cause knee pain?
Yes. Overpronation causes the tibia to rotate inward excessively with each step, which drives the knee into a valgus (knock-kneed) position. This increases medial knee stress and alters patellar tracking, producing the inner knee and anterior knee pain commonly associated with flat feet. Correcting foot and hip mechanics through physiotherapy directly reduces this loading pattern.
Q5. Are fallen arches exercises safe during plantar fasciitis?
Yes, with appropriate loading and progression. Gentle intrinsic foot exercises and tibialis posterior activation are safe during plantar fasciitis and are part of the standard treatment approach. High-load exercises such as single-leg heel raises and plyometric work are introduced progressively once acute pain is controlled. A physiotherapist will sequence the programme to avoid aggravating the fascia while building arch support that reduces its load.
Q6. How long does it take to see results from physiotherapy for flat feet?
Most patients notice reduced pain and improved foot fatigue within 4 to 6 weeks of consistent rehabilitation. Measurable changes in arch height and gait pattern typically develop over 8 to 12 weeks. Return to sport or high-demand activity is allowed when strength and movement quality criteria are met, usually at 10 to 16 weeks, depending on severity and activity level.
Q7. Does Healyos provide physiotherapy for flat feet and overpronation treatment at home in Pune?
Yes, Healyos in Pune provides flat feet physiotherapy and overpronation treatment through home visits, in-clinic sessions, and online consultations in both cities, Navi Mumbai and Pune. Our orthopaedic physiotherapists conduct thorough gait and foot posture assessments and design rehabilitation programmes that address foot mechanics, proximal strength, and movement patterns together. Flat feet and overpronation are not conditions that resolve by buying better shoes. They require a proper gait assessment, targeted muscle rehabilitation, and, in many cases, a coordinated approach between physiotherapy and orthotics to achieve lasting relief. Take the first step: book a consultation online to arrange an assessment.

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