1000's sold, 100's of 5★ reviews
Swipe to read what tradies are saying
TL
★★★★★
“Awesome – very comfortable!”
DV
★★★★★
“Two weeks in and my heel pain is dramatically reduced.”
JT
★★★★★
“Fit well, super comfy, and great support all day on concrete.”
Relieve Plantar Fasciitis, Aching Arches, Foot Pain & Knee Pain with our Australian Podiatrist Designed Safety Boots!
We were seeing too many people coming into our clinics suffering from pain caused by bad work boots. So we've fixed the problems and made our own range of high quality AU / NZ Safety Standard (BMP 586124, AS 2210.3:2019, Class I S1 P HRO SRA) approved work boots.
AU / NZ Safety Standard
BMP 586124
AS 2210.3:2019
Class I S1 P HRO SRA
Composite toe work shoes protect like steel caps but are lighter and cooler (better insulators).
Arch Support Insole
Biomechanical Foot Support
Composite Safety Toe
Slip Resistant Outsole
Hot/Cold Insulation
Wide Fit
Antibacterial Upper
Antistatic
Full Grain Leather
Airport Friendly
Oil/Fuel Resistant
Heat Resistant (HRO)
Latest video
When you see a painful corn under the little toe joint (the 5th metatarsal head), it’s usually not
When you see a painful corn under the little toe joint (the 5th metatarsal head), it’s usually not “just bad skin” — it’s a pressure problem. In today’s treatment, our podiatrist carefully removed a deep plantar corn sitting right under the 5th metatarsal head. This area commonly overloads in people with a higher arch foot. High arches don’t absorb shock as well, and the foot tends to roll pressure slightly to the outside. Over time, that concentrated load builds up thickened skin. As we age, the natural fat pad under the forefoot also thins out, which means even less cushioning. The result? Localised pressure, hard skin, and eventually a painful corn. What we did: • Debrided the overlying callus • Enucleated the corn core • Smoothed the surrounding tissue to reduce friction • Assessed offloading options to prevent recurrence Why this matters: A corn is your body’s response to excessive pressure. If we don’t address the mechanical cause — foot structure, pressure distribution, footwear — it will keep coming back. If you’ve got a sharp, focal pain under the outside of your forefoot that feels like you’re walking on a stone, it may not be “just dry skin.” It may be overload from foot structure and fat pad thinning. Early treatment = less pain and better long-term management. If you’re noticing increasing pressure under the ball of your foot, get it assessed before it becomes chronic.