If you've ever walked into a run specialty store, chances are someone asked to watch you walk or jog before they recommended a shoe. That's gait analysis — and if you've never had one done, or you're not quite sure what the staff member was actually looking at, this is for you.

What Gait Analysis Actually Is

Gait analysis is the observation and assessment of how you move when you walk or run. In a run specialty context, it's usually a trained staff member watching you walk or jog — either on a treadmill or across the store — and looking for specific patterns in how your foot strikes the ground, how your ankle moves, and how your body compensates for any imbalances.

The goal isn't to find something wrong with you. Most people's gait is completely normal. The goal is to understand how you move so the shoe recommendation matches your body — not just your size.

What the Staff Member Is Looking For

Pronation

Pronation is the natural inward rolling of the foot as it absorbs impact. Almost everyone pronates to some degree — it's a normal part of how the foot is designed to work. The question is degree:

  • Neutral pronation — the foot rolls inward a healthy amount and the arch absorbs impact evenly. Most runners. A neutral shoe works well.
  • Overpronation — the foot rolls inward excessively, which can place stress on the ankle, knee, and hip over time. A stability or motion control shoe provides medial support to counteract this.
  • Supination (underpronation) — the foot rolls outward rather than inward. Less common. Typically benefits from a neutral shoe with extra cushioning.

Heel Strike vs. Midfoot Strike

Where your foot makes first contact with the ground matters for shoe selection. Heel strikers tend to need more cushioning in the heel. Midfoot strikers distribute impact more evenly and often prefer a more flexible shoe with a lower heel-to-toe drop.

Arch Type

High arches, flat feet, and everything in between affect how load is distributed across the foot and which shoe structures provide the most comfort and support over long distances.

Why It Actually Matters

Running in a shoe that doesn't match your gait doesn't necessarily hurt immediately. The problems tend to develop over miles — IT band issues, plantar fasciitis, knee pain, shin splints. A lot of running injuries are biomechanical mismatches that built up over time, not acute events.

A proper gait assessment can catch those mismatches before they become injuries. That's the actual value — not just comfort on the first run, but the ability to stay healthy over a training cycle.

A common misconception: Gait analysis tells you which shoe to buy. Actually, it tells you which category of shoe to explore. The right shoe within that category is still about feel — how it fits your specific foot shape, how it responds to your stride, and whether it feels right after a 20-minute run. That's why the try-on still matters after the assessment.

What to Expect at a Run Specialty Store

At a good run specialty store, gait analysis is part of the fit process — not an add-on. When you come in for a shoe fitting, a trained staff member will:

  • Ask about your running history, current mileage, and any injuries
  • Measure your feet (both of them — most people's feet are slightly different sizes)
  • Watch you walk, and often jog if you're comfortable
  • Explain what they observed in plain language
  • Pull 2-3 shoe options that fit your gait pattern and your goals
  • Let you run in each option and adjust based on how they feel

The whole process takes 20-30 minutes at a shop that does it right. You'll leave knowing more about how you run than most recreational runners ever learn — and in a shoe that was actually chosen for you, not just for your size.

Can You Get Gait Analysis Online?

Some brands and websites offer video-based gait assessments. They're better than nothing, but they're not the same. A trained eye in the room, watching you in real time, catching things that a camera angle might miss — that's the specialty retail advantage. It's also why runners who've had a proper in-store assessment rarely go back to buying shoes online without one.