Custom Orthotics Cost: What 59 Clinics Actually Charge in 2026

Custom orthotics cost an average of $435 all-in across the 59 clinics we surveyed, with a range of $50 to $975. Most podiatrists charge $400 to $600 for the device, plus $100 to $300 for the required evaluation. Prices vary substantially by provider type, geography, and whether insurance covers the device.

If you have searched for custom orthotics and walked away confused about the price, you are not alone. Ranges online go from $200 to $1,000 with no way to tell what a real clinic actually charges. Most clinics refuse to publish prices at all.

So we did the work. Over several months we compiled the published prices at 59 podiatry, chiropractic, physical therapy, and pedorthic clinics across the United States, Canada, Australia, the United Kingdom, and New Zealand. Every figure in this article comes directly from the clinic's own website. Nothing is estimated.

What we found: prices for a custom orthotic device can vary dramatically between clinics in the same city, let alone across countries. Understanding what drives the price, and where the markup comes from, makes it easier to shop informed.

How much do custom orthotics cost?

All-in average
$435
across 59 clinics
Range
$50–$975
all-in, USD
Median
$400
half pay more, half less

The average all-in cost for custom orthotics at a traditional clinic is $435. That includes the orthotic device plus any required evaluation, casting, or fitting fees the clinic lists as separate charges.

The range is wide. At the low end of the sample, direct-pay clinics and pedorthist shops publish prices in the low hundreds. At the high end, premium urban podiatry practices bundle the evaluation, casting, and follow-up visits into a single all-in figure that pushes past $900. Same device category; very different clinical model and overhead.

Pricing by country

🇺🇸
USA
$454
avg all-in • n=34
🇨🇦
Canada
$383
avg all-in • n=17
🇦🇺
Australia
$520
avg all-in • n=4
🇬🇧
UK
$514
avg all-in • n=3
🇳🇿
New Zealand
$91
avg all-in • n=1

Country of care matters less than you might expect. American clinics average the highest in the sample, driven by premium urban podiatry practices and higher office-visit fees. Canadian prices sit slightly below U.S. prices on average because more Canadian clinics bundle the assessment into the orthotic price. Australia skews high due to a small sample of premium Sydney clinics. Scotland's 3D-printed model at Footcare Scotland comes in at the lowest UK price point.

What drives the price

Two clinics can charge very different amounts for a comparable custom orthotic. Looking across the 59 clinics we surveyed, the biggest factors are:

  • Provider type and overhead. A podiatry practice with a medical office, x-ray machine, billing staff, and insurance contracts has different fixed costs than a pedorthist working out of a shoe store.
  • Whether the evaluation is bundled or separate. Some clinics quote an orthotic price and charge the evaluation separately. Others bundle everything into one all-in figure. That structural difference alone can shift the headline price by $150 to $300.
  • Materials and construction. Rigid polypropylene, carbon fiber, and multi-density EVA all have different material costs. Advanced 3D-printed constructions and specialty orthotics (post-surgical, diabetic accommodative) command premium pricing.
  • Geography and cost of living. Urban practices in high-rent markets charge more. The same provider type in a smaller city may charge 30 to 40 percent less.
  • Insurance vs. direct-pay model. Practices that do not bill insurance tend to publish transparent prices. Insurance-billing practices often quote only self-pay rates when directly asked, and these can run higher.

None of this maps cleanly to outcome quality. A well-cast orthotic from an experienced clinician using a reputable lab is a well-made orthotic regardless of what the clinic charges for overhead.

Prices by provider type

Provider type Avg all-in Range Clinics
Podiatrist $564 $185–$975 25
Chiropractor $372 $254–$472 14
Physical Therapist $287 $50–$550 8
Pedorthist $339 $129–$525 8
Orthotist $352 $91–$615 3

Podiatrists (MDs) charge the most on average in our sample. Pedorthists — certified orthotic specialists, often working out of independent shoe stores or orthotic clinics — tend to publish lower prices because their practice model has different overhead. Chiropractors and physical therapists who dispense orthotics fall in the middle. These are averages from published prices, not claims about clinical quality; a skilled clinician of any type, working with a reputable lab, produces a well-made orthotic.

The full dataset: 59 clinics compared

Every clinic below has their pricing published on their own website. Filter by country, search by name, or sort by price. Click any clinic to see the source.

What "all-in" means

All-in includes the orthotic device plus any required evaluation, casting, or fitting fees the clinic states as separate charges. Clinics that bundle fees or bill insurance for the visit show the orthotic price as the all-in figure. Local currency prices convert at approximate rates (CAD 0.725, AUD 0.655, GBP 1.295, NZD 0.59).

Showing all 59 clinics
Clinic Location Orthotic All-In Notes Source
Joel D Foster MD PC
Podiatrist
🇺🇸 Lee's Summit, MO
USA
$375 $825 Direct-pay model; orthotic standalone $375; bundled $825 with full workup View →
Foot & Ankle Center of Washington
Podiatrist
🇺🇸 Seattle, WA
USA
$498 $685 Blog states $498 is fair orthotic price; visit fee explicit View →
Annapolis Foot & Ankle Center
Podiatrist
🇺🇸 Annapolis, MD
USA
$450 $619 Cash-pay model; visit fee stated View →
Center for Ankle & Foot Care
Podiatrist
🇺🇸 Clermont, FL
USA
$550 $700 Self-pay pricing published; visit est. added View →
Texas Foot & Ankle Specialists
Podiatrist
🇺🇸 Dallas, TX
USA
$325 $475 Cash-pay pricing; eval fee stated separately View →
Traction Podiatry
Podiatrist
🇺🇸 Phoenix, AZ
USA
$500 $625 Cash-pay fee schedule published View →
Foothills Podiatry
Podiatrist
🇺🇸 Phoenix, AZ
USA
$400 $550 Fee schedule published View →
Heath Podiatry
Podiatrist
🇺🇸 Cooper City, FL
USA
$400 $495 Self-pay rates published; flat visit fee stated View →
Queen City Foot & Ankle
Podiatrist
🇺🇸 Charlotte, NC
USA
$611 $786 Premium end of US range View →
The Mobile Podiatrist
Podiatrist
🇺🇸 Salt Lake City, UT
USA
$425 $625 Rates published; house-call fee variable View →
Oregon Institute of Foot Care
Podiatrist
🇺🇸 Lake Oswego, OR
USA
$500 $750 Direct-pay model; visit fees stated View →
New Jersey Sports Medicine
Sports Med MD
🇺🇸 North Plainfield, NJ
USA
$300 $300 Insurance-billed visit; cash orthotic price if not covered View →
District Foot & Ankle
Podiatrist
🇺🇸 Alexandria, VA
USA
$600 $975 Full self-pay fee schedule published; high visit cost View →
Brooklyn Podiatry Associates
Podiatrist
🇺🇸 Brooklyn, NY
USA
$250 $250 Cash price page; 3D-printed tech, lowest in NYC View →
Minimally Invasive Bunion Solutions
Podiatrist
🇺🇸 Fort Myers, FL
USA
$450 $600 Peter Walimire MD; Apple Face ID 3D scan View →
Premier Podiatry / Dr. Paholak
Podiatrist
🇺🇸 Chicago, IL
USA
$400 $525 Explicit pricing menu; 'starting at $400' View →
Boston Sports Medicine
Sports Med / PT
🇺🇸 Boston, MA
USA
$170 $170 Unusually transparent cost-plus pricing View →
BioMechanic PT (flip-flops)
Physical Therapist
🇺🇸 Annandale, VA
USA
$50 $50 Entry-level; not a full custom orthotic View →
BioMechanic PT (wholesale)
Physical Therapist
🇺🇸 Annandale, VA
USA
$178 $328 Unique cost-plus model View →
Proformance Physical Therapy
Physical Therapist
🇺🇸 Lincoln, NE
USA
$259 $334 Sole Supports orthotics; transparent pricing View →
TrueMotion Physical Therapy
Physical Therapist
🇺🇸 Ridgefield, CT
USA
$350 $350 Private pay rate published; visit handled separately View →
Lake Washington Physical Therapy
Physical Therapist
🇺🇸 Kirkland, WA
USA
$400 $550 Detailed tiered pricing; visit fee stated View →
OrthoWell PT / WalkWell
Physical Therapist
🇺🇸 Newburyport, MA
USA
$240 $240 Same-day custom orthotic fab; add-ons (met pads, heel pads) can raise final price View →
Core Physical Therapy (Vasyli)
Physical Therapist
🇺🇸 Chicago, IL
USA
$150 $275 Semi-custom heat-molded; visit est. $125 View →
Elite Feet USA (mail order)
Orthotist
🇺🇸 N/A (US mail order), N/A
USA
$350 $350 Mail-order custom orthotic service View →
CORE Chiropractic
Chiropractor
🇺🇸 Houston, TX
USA
$250 $350 Public price list; visit est. View →
Maine Portland Chiropractor
Chiropractor
🇺🇸 Portland, ME
USA
$318 $418 Foot Levelers dispenser; fee schedule published View →
Orinda Chiropractic and Laser
Chiropractor
🇺🇸 Orinda, CA
USA
$300 $400 Dr. Kevin Wong; visit est. $100 View →
Ortho Works Inc
Pedorthist/Clinic
🇺🇸 New York, NY
USA
$365 $365 All-inclusive via Groupon; may be promo price View →
Footstar Orthotics
Pedorthist
🇺🇸 Wilton, CT
USA
$205 $205 Product-and-fitting in one; $185-$225 range midpoint View →
FootTek
Pedorthist
🇺🇸 Warwick, RI
USA
$129 $129 Low-cost pedorthist; semi-custom View →
Burrard Clinic (Dr. Zavosh)
Chiropodist
🇨🇦 Vancouver, BC
Canada
$360
C$495
$360 All-inclusive pricing stated View →
Vancouver Orthotics (Dr. Horowitz)
Pedorthist
🇨🇦 Vancouver, BC
Canada
$327
C$450
$396 Full $450, half $395; exam fee explicit View →
Kerrisdale Family Foot Clinic
Podiatrist
🇨🇦 Vancouver, BC
Canada
$363
C$500
$491 Total $675 CAD for orthotic + casting View →
Kintec (multi-location)
Pedorthist
🇨🇦 Surrey, BC
Canada
$374
C$515
$443 Range $480-$550 CAD; midpoint used View →
Toronto Physiotherapy (Pennell)
Physiotherapist/Chiro
🇨🇦 Toronto, ON
Canada
$327
C$450
$327 All-inclusive pricing stated View →
Metrotown Chiropractic
Chiropractor
🇨🇦 Burnaby, BC
Canada
$363
C$500
$363 All-inclusive; $100 deposit, $400 balance View →
Abundant Life Chiropractic
Chiropractor
🇨🇦 Markham, ON
Canada
$254
C$350
$254 Low-end Canadian pricing View →
Haman Chiropractic
Chiropractor
🇨🇦 Grande Prairie, AB
Canada
$322
C$443
$387 Orthotic price published on services page View →
Ossington Physio & Chiropractic
Chiropractor
🇨🇦 Toronto, ON
Canada
$363
C$500
$363 2 pairs $950 CAD; assessment bundled View →
Hauck Podiatry
Podiatrist
🇨🇦 Saskatoon, SK
Canada
$508
C$700
$508 All-inclusive detailed pricing; 2nd/duplicate pair $375 CAD View →
Bow Valley Chiropractic
Chiropractor
🇨🇦 Calgary, AB
Canada
$372
C$513
$372 Multi-location Calgary; complimentary initial View →
HealthWalks
Pedorthist
🇨🇦 Truro, NS
Canada
$343
C$473
$343 Pedorthist-led shoe store/clinic; Nova Scotia View →
Dr. Rebecca-Jane McAllister
Chiropractor
🇨🇦 Calgary, AB
Canada
$363
C$500
$472 Explicit fee schedule; 2nd pair within 6mo $350 View →
Oshawa Chiropractor
Chiropractor
🇨🇦 Oshawa, ON
Canada
$399
C$550
$399 Full price published; all-in bundled View →
Sports Podiatrists
Podiatrist
🇦🇺 Sydney, NSW
Australia
$282
A$430
$452 Loyalty rate; new patient workup adds $260 AUD View →
Hurst Podiatry
Podiatrist
🇦🇺 Hurstville, NSW
Australia
$426
A$650
$426 Custom $650; semi-custom $395 AUD also offered View →
ModPod Podiatry
Podiatrist
🇦🇺 Sydney, NSW
Australia
$453
A$690
$719 Adult $690, children $550; Total Bio Package $325 AUD View →
London Orthotic Consultancy
Orthotist
🇬🇧 London, England
UK
$615
£475
$615 Premium orthotist; express upcharge available View →
Footcare Scotland
Podiatrist
🇬🇧 Edinburgh area, Scotland
UK
$356
£275
$356 3D-printed custom; 10-14 day lab time; 3-5 year lifespan View →
Francis Connor Podiatry
Podiatrist
🇬🇧 Radcliffe (Manchester), England
UK
$570
£440
$570 3D printed custom with 2-year guarantee; gait analysis included View →
Boulder Orthotics
Pedorthist
🇺🇸 Niwot, CO
USA
$425 $525 Full published price list; fixed-foot orthotics $365 for ski/cycling View →
Capital Podiatry Associates
Podiatrist
🇺🇸 Alexandria, VA
USA
$185 $185 Only published rate is 2nd-pair self-pay ($185); 1st pair not published View →
Blue Ridge Footcare & Surgery
Podiatrist
🇺🇸 Staunton, VA
USA
$335 $420 Full self-pay fee schedule; Shenandoah Valley practice View →
Toronto Orthotics (Dr. Horowitz)
Chiropractor
🇨🇦 Toronto, ON
Canada
$308
C$425
$402 Private clinic; not covered by OHIP; 2nd pair $375 within 6mo View →
Sunnyside Mall Comfort Orthotics
Pedorthist
🇨🇦 Bedford, NS
Canada
$305
C$420
$305 Implied from $350 2nd-pair 'savings of $70' stated on page View →
Alouette Chiropractic / Maple Ridge
Chiropractor
🇨🇦 Maple Ridge, BC
Canada
$334
C$460
$334 All-inclusive pricing; no add-on modification fees View →
Shore Orthotics
Orthotist
🇳🇿 Auckland, Auckland
New Zealand
$91
NZ$155
$91 Consult fee only stated publicly; orthotic price 'POR' (likely $500-$800 NZD) View →
Melbourne Podiatrists & Orthotics
Podiatrist
🇦🇺 Camberwell (Melbourne), VIC
Australia
$485
A$740
$485 2nd-pair promo $540 AUD implies first pair ~$740 AUD View →

Does insurance cover custom orthotics?

Sometimes. Here is what actually drives coverage:

  • Medicare covers custom orthotics only for diabetic patients with documented foot complications. It does not cover orthotics for general foot pain, even with a podiatrist's prescription.
  • Private insurance coverage varies plan by plan. Some policies cover orthotics under the Durable Medical Equipment (DME) benefit with a valid prescription and a qualifying diagnosis (plantar fasciitis ICD-10 M72.2 is the most common). Others exclude them entirely.
  • Prior authorization is required on many plans. That means your podiatrist submits paperwork before fabrication and waits for approval.
  • Step therapy requirements are common. Your insurer may require documentation that over-the-counter insoles, physical therapy, or stretching were tried first.
  • Frequency limits typically cap coverage at one pair every two to three years, even when covered.

Even when insurance covers custom orthotics, you typically pay 10 to 50 percent of the cost as coinsurance after your deductible. For a $500 device with a 20% coinsurance and a $1,500 deductible not yet met, you pay the full $500.

HSA and FSA funds work differently. Custom orthotics are a qualified medical expense, meaning you can pay with pre-tax dollars regardless of insurance coverage. For most taxpayers that amounts to a 22 to 35 percent effective discount.

How to save money on custom orthotics

If you have decided you need custom orthotics, here is how to avoid overpaying:

  1. Ask for an itemized price before the first appointment. Many clinics quote only the orthotic price and omit the evaluation fee. Get both in writing.
  2. Check direct-pay clinics. Practices that do not bill insurance often publish transparent prices. Every clinic in the table above with a flat published price is a direct-pay option.
  3. Use HSA or FSA funds. Pre-tax dollars mean an effective 22 to 35 percent discount depending on your tax bracket.
  4. Ask about multi-pair discounts. Once the lab has your mold on file, a second pair typically costs less. If you plan to keep one pair in work shoes and one in athletic shoes, discuss both up front.
  5. Refurbish rather than replace. Most custom orthotics wear out on the top cover while the shell remains functional. Refurbishment costs $80 to $125 at most clinics versus hundreds for a new pair.

Are custom orthotics worth the cost?

For most people with mild foot pain, a quality over-the-counter insert ($40 to $60) will solve the problem. Several clinical reviews have found that for mild conditions, prefabricated orthotics perform comparably to custom ones, and clinicians routinely recommend trialing an over-the-counter device first.

Custom orthotics meaningfully outperform over-the-counter inserts in specific situations:

  • Chronic or severe plantar fasciitis that has not responded to OTC insoles after 6 to 8 weeks
  • Significant flat feet (pes planus) or high arches (pes cavus) causing pain
  • Diabetic foot care, especially with neuropathy or history of ulcers
  • Post-surgical recovery or leg length discrepancy
  • Recurrent lower limb injuries that track back to biomechanical issues
  • Posterior tibial tendon dysfunction or adult-acquired flatfoot

For those cases, a well-made custom orthotic lasting three to five years can be a reasonable investment. The per-year cost is often lower than replacing over-the-counter insoles annually. And the clinical evaluation itself has value: a good podiatrist may identify that a targeted stretching program, a shoe change, or physical therapy will solve the problem without custom orthotics at all.

Frequently asked questions

Why are custom orthotics so expensive?
Most of what you pay is not the device itself. A significant share of the price covers the clinical evaluation, gait analysis, casting or scanning, fitting visits, and the provider's overhead. The device is manufactured at an orthotic lab, then marked up when the clinic dispenses it. Premium clinics in high cost-of-living areas can charge over $1,000 for a device that a direct-pay clinic in a smaller market charges $300 for. Materials, complexity of the prescription, and the provider's expertise all factor into the final price.
Does insurance cover custom orthotics?
Sometimes. Coverage depends entirely on your plan and diagnosis. Medicare covers custom orthotics only for diabetic patients with foot complications. Private insurance typically requires a podiatrist prescription, a medically necessary diagnosis (such as plantar fasciitis with ICD-10 code M72.2), and in many cases prior authorization. Many plans exclude orthotics entirely. If covered, you typically still pay 10 to 50 percent of the cost as coinsurance. HSA and FSA funds can be used for custom orthotics tax-free regardless of insurance coverage.
How long do custom orthotics last?
A well-made custom orthotic lasts two to five years with daily wear. Rigid materials like polypropylene and carbon fiber last longer than softer foam devices. Your activity level, body weight, and the type of shoes you wear them in all affect lifespan. The top cover is usually the first thing to wear out and can often be replaced for $80 to $125 rather than buying a new pair.
What's the difference between custom orthotics and over-the-counter inserts?
Over-the-counter inserts are mass-produced in standard arch heights and sold for $20 to $80. They provide general cushioning and basic support. Custom orthotics are fabricated from a cast or 3D scan of your specific foot, with prescription features built in to address your individual biomechanics. Clinical research has generally found prefabricated orthotics perform comparably to custom ones for mild conditions. For severe flat feet, diabetic foot care, significant leg length discrepancies, or complex biomechanical problems, custom orthotics are typically more appropriate.
Are custom orthotics worth the cost?
For simple arch support or mild occasional foot pain, a quality over-the-counter insert at $40 to $60 is often enough. For chronic plantar fasciitis, significant flat feet, post-surgical feet, diabetic foot care, or biomechanical problems that haven't responded to cheaper options, custom orthotics are worth the investment. They typically last two to five years, which brings the per-year cost below what you would spend replacing over-the-counter insoles annually. The clinical evaluation itself has value — a good podiatrist may identify that you don't need custom orthotics at all.
Can you get custom orthotics without a podiatrist visit?
Yes. Several direct-to-consumer providers use smartphone-based 3D scanning or foam impression kits to capture your foot shape, then have the device fabricated at an orthotic lab. This model skips the in-person evaluation, which is the single largest cost component at most traditional clinics. Whether this is the right path depends on your situation: for complex medical cases, diabetic foot care, or post-surgical needs, an in-person clinical evaluation is typically more appropriate. For straightforward biomechanical support, a remote provider may be sufficient.
How much do custom orthotics cost with insurance?
With insurance coverage and a valid prescription, out-of-pocket costs typically range from $50 to $300, or roughly 10 to 50 percent of the device cost. Coverage requires medical necessity documentation and often prior authorization. Many plans also cap how often new orthotics are covered — typically once every two to three years. Always verify coverage with your insurer before the appointment; some clinics will check benefits for you upfront.
What's included in the cost of custom orthotics?
At most clinics, the base orthotic price covers the device itself and a fitting appointment. What's often charged separately: the initial evaluation ($100 to $300), imaging like X-rays or ultrasound, the casting or 3D scanning procedure, and follow-up adjustments after the break-in period. Always ask for an itemized estimate before committing. Direct-pay clinics typically bundle these into a single transparent price. Online providers generally include everything in a single flat fee.
ZC
Medically reviewed by Dr. Zac Cartun, MD

Chief Medical Officer, Stride Soles. Board-certified doctor with a clinical focus on radiology and a passion for telemedicine.


Reviewed for clinical accuracy by Dr. Zac Cartun, MD, Chief Medical Officer at Stride Soles. Last reviewed April 2026. This article is for informational purposes and is not a substitute for medical advice from a licensed clinician.