Morton's neuroma is a forefoot problem dressed up in a confusing name. It is not a tumour. It is a thickened, irritated nerve, most often between the third and fourth toes. This guide walks you through the diagnosis the same way a good clinician would: pattern check first, mechanism second, self-tests third, decision last. Each step exists because the previous one narrowed the field.
Work through it once, end to end. By the end you will know whether what you are feeling is likely Morton's neuroma, what almost certainly caused it, and what you should do this week.
Step 1: Match the pain pattern
Morton's neuroma has a specific signature. Get the pattern right and the rest of the protocol works.
The five-point check
- A sharp, burning, or electric pain in the ball of the foot, most often between the third and fourth toes.
- A sensation that there is a small pebble or fold in the sock that you cannot remove.
- Pain that worsens during longer runs and lingers afterwards.
- Numbness or tingling in the two adjacent toes.
- Relief, often immediate, when you remove your shoe and squeeze the foot wide.
Three or more of these and Morton's neuroma is the working hypothesis. One or two and you are probably looking at metatarsalgia, a stress reaction, or a capsulitis. The STRIDD injuries hub has the wider triage.
Why this is not metatarsalgia
Metatarsalgia is a generic pain at the ball of the foot, usually a bruised feeling under one of the metatarsal heads. Morton's neuroma has a sharper, nerve-like quality and tends to sit between the toes, not under a bone. The pebble-in-sock sensation is highly specific to neuroma.
Step 2: Identify the mechanism
Morton's neuroma in runners almost always traces to one of a small set of causes. Identify yours.
The five common causes in Indian runners
- A switch to a narrower toe-box shoe (often a road racing flat or a carbon-plated racer with a tapered front).
- A jump in long-run distance during marathon training without a corresponding shoe rotation.
- Aggressive sprint or hill work that increases push-off load on the forefoot.
- Returning to running on hard summer roads (Delhi, Pune, Chennai) after a softer-surface base.
- A new shoe that fits well in the heel but is half a size short, crowding the toes during late-stance.
Write down which of these matches your story. Most runners can pinpoint one within thirty seconds. That is your trigger.
The shoe size truth
Most runners under-size by half a size. The foot lengthens by 5 to 10 millimetres during a long run as it loads and warms. A shoe that fits well in the store is often a size too small at kilometre twenty. For marathon training, size up so there is a thumb's width of space ahead of the longest toe when standing.
Step 3: Run the diagnostic self-tests
These tests are not a substitute for a clinician, but they tell you how confident you can be in the working hypothesis.
The Mulder's click test (self-version)
Sit comfortably. Hold the foot with one hand wrapped around the metatarsals from the side, with thumb on top and fingers underneath. Squeeze the metatarsal heads together with one hand. With the thumb of the other hand, press up between the third and fourth metatarsal heads from below. A reproducible click and a sharp pain is a strong indicator of Morton's neuroma. A clinician will do this more precisely.
The toe-spread test
Stand barefoot. Spread the toes apart as wide as possible. Hold for 5 seconds. If the typical pain reduces, your forefoot is being compressed by your footwear during runs. The fix points to the shoe, not the foot.
The shoe-off relief test
If your typical pain consistently disappears within 30 to 60 seconds of removing the shoe and massaging the foot wide, the shoe is overwhelmingly the trigger. This is diagnostic in everything but name.
Step 4: Decide your next step
Match your findings to a path. Each path is built around the most common patterns.
Path A: The shoe trigger
If your tests point to footwear (small toe-box, half-size short, recent switch to racing shoes), the immediate fix is a shoe rotation. Use a wider, more comfortable trainer for daily runs. Reserve the racing shoe for race-day only. Add a metatarsal pad placed just proximal to the neuroma site to redistribute load. Reduce running volume by 25 to 30 percent for 2 weeks.
Path B: The load trigger
If your tests point to a sudden volume or intensity increase, reduce weekly mileage by 30 to 40 percent for 10 to 14 days. Cut speed work and hill repeats. Add a metatarsal pad. Run only on soft surfaces. Re-introduce volume at no more than 10 percent per week from the new baseline.
Path C: Pain persists beyond 2 weeks of self-management
If the protocol above does not reduce symptoms within 2 weeks, see a sports physician or podiatrist. Ultrasound or MRI can confirm the neuroma. First-line clinical management adds custom orthotics, structured offloading, and occasionally a corticosteroid injection. Surgical decompression or neurectomy is reserved for refractory cases.
Step 5: Plan the recovery arc
Morton's neuroma rarely resolves overnight. Plan for a longer arc.
Weeks 1 to 2
Reduce load. Switch to wider footwear. Add a metatarsal pad. Cut speed work and hills. Run on soft surfaces only. Walk-run as needed.
Weeks 3 to 6
Progressive return to normal running volume in the wider shoe. Re-introduce speed work and hill work only when pain-free during regular runs. Continue the metatarsal pad. Add intrinsic foot strength work from the STRIDD exercise library: short-foot drills, toe yoga, single-leg balance on a stable surface.
Weeks 7 onwards
Goal-race specificity returns. Keep the wider trainer for most runs. Use the racing shoe only for tune-up workouts and race day. Build a plan that respects your current foot-load tolerance in the STRIDD plan generator.
Step 6: Decide when to escalate
The protocol above resolves most early-stage cases. Escalate when these flags appear.
Red flags
- Symptoms unchanged after 2 weeks of correct self-management.
- Persistent numbness or tingling, even at rest.
- Pain that wakes you at night.
- Inability to walk pain-free in any footwear.
- A history of previous neuroma on the same foot.
Read the STRIDD recovery guide for the broader framework around staged return to running. The Running Lab hosts adjacent guides on forefoot conditioning and shoe-fit decisions.
What to do this week
If you have walked through the six steps above and confirmed the pattern, your week looks like this. Switch your daily-trainer shoe to a wider model. Add a metatarsal pad. Reduce volume by 30 percent. Cut speed work. Walk daily. Re-test the pain pattern at the end of the week. If symptoms have eased by 30 percent or more, continue. If not, escalate to a clinician.
If you have a race in the next 6 to 10 weeks, do not push through the racing shoe. Re-plan in the plan generator with a more conservative target. A pain-free finish in a wider shoe beats a faster DNF in a tapered racer every time.