Tracking Your Bunion: A Home Self-Measurement Guide to Monitor Progression
Most patients have no idea whether their bunion is staying stable, slowly worsening, or rapidly progressing until a podiatrist shows them their X-rays at an follow-up appointment. Simple home tracking methods give you early warning of progression and make your podiatry data considerably more useful.
Why Home Tracking Matters
- Bunion progression is slow — changes over months are hard to perceive without measurement
- Early detection of accelerating progression can trigger earlier intervention that prevents surgical necessity
- Tracking provides context for treatment decisions — "Is what I'm doing working?"
- Documented records over months give your podiatrist objective comparison points
Method 1: Traced Foot Outline (Quarterly)
The simplest, most useful home measurement:
- Stand on a sheet of blank white paper, full weight on one foot
- Trace the exact outline of your foot with a fine pen held perpendicular to the paper (not angled inward, which underestimates the bunion)
- Step off carefully; date and label the tracing
- Repeat every 3 months with the same pen, same paper type, same standing surface
What to measure from the tracing:
- Width at the widest point (the bunion area): use a ruler. Record in millimeters.
- The angle of the big toe: visually, how much is it pointing toward the second toe vs. straight forward? Take a photo of the tracing next to a ruler for archive.
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Method 2: Photographic Documentation
- Stand barefoot on a consistent surface (tile floor works best — reference lines visible)
- Take standing photos from three angles: front (from toes), medial (from big toe side), and plantar (foot bottom, lying on back and photographing sole against a light background)
- Date each photo; store in a dedicated phone album named "Bunion Tracking"
- Compare same-angle photos month to month
Signs of progression in photos:
- Increasing angle of big toe toward second toe
- Second toe beginning to overlap or elevate
- Growing prominence of the medial bump
- New callus formation under the ball of the foot
Method 3: Measurement Tape (Monthly)
Three measurements to track:
- Bunion width: Widest width across the foot at the first metatarsal head level (standing, full weight). Normal foot: ~85-95mm. Bunion patients often measure 95-115mm.
- Big toe drift: Stand on paper, mark the tip of the big toe and the tip of the second toe with dots. Measure the horizontal distance between the two dots — increasing distance indicates increasing valgus drift.
- Bump height: Measuring tape around the first MTP joint — bursitis and swelling will show as increased circumference during flares vs. baseline
Red Flags That Warrant Urgent Podiatry Visit
- Rapid toe drift increase >5mm in 3 months
- Second toe beginning to cross over or under the big toe
- New sharp or electric pain in the big toe area (nerve involvement)
- Skin breakdown over the bunion bump
Quarterly tracing plus monthly photos takes under 10 minutes total. The information it generates is invaluable — both for your own understanding and for giving your podiatrist trend data that a single X-ray appointment cannot provide.