3 Proven Mistakes Making Your Plantar Fasciitis Worse

You swing your legs out of bed. Put your foot on the floor.

Bang.

That sharp pain shoots into your heel. The first few steps feel stiff, sore, and awkward. Sometimes it eases as you move. Sometimes it lingers all day. You stretch it, roll it on a ball, change your shoes, and hope it will just settle on its own.

But weeks later – sometimes months later – it is still there.

If this sounds familiar, you are not alone. At Compass Physio, plantar fasciitis treatment is one of the most common things we help people with across our clinics in Meath and Kildare. It rarely comes out of nowhere. In most cases, it builds gradually until it starts affecting walking, training, work, and day-to-day life.

Plantar fasciitis treatment Ireland

Why so many people struggle to get on top of it

Plantar fasciitis treatment is one of the most common things we help people with across our clinics in Meath and Kildare. Most people arrive having already tried rest, new shoes, and stretching – sometimes for months.

The reason those things often fail is straightforward. They address the symptom, not the source. The heel is painful, but the heel is rarely the whole story.

Understanding what is actually driving the overload is where proper recovery begins.

The good news? With the right plan, most people recover very well. The challenge is understanding why it started in the first place.

What Is Plantar Fasciitis?

Your plantar fascia is a thick band of tissue running from your heel bone to the front of your foot. Think of it like a supportive cable that helps absorb force and support your arch when you walk, run, or stand.

When this tissue becomes overloaded, irritated, or less tolerant to stress, pain develops around the heel. Many people call this plantar fasciitis.

But in reality – especially when symptoms have been there for a while – it is often more accurate to call it plantar fasciosis.

What is the difference?

Plantar fasciitis usually describes an irritated or inflamed phase. Plantar fasciosis describes longer-term overload, where the tissue becomes thickened and less healthy over time. The HSE describes plantar fasciitis as one of the most common causes of heel pain in adults.

It is an overload problem – not a damage problem. And that changes how it should be treated.

Why Does Plantar Fasciitis Happen?

One of the biggest myths around heel pain: “It just came on suddenly.”

In reality, it almost always builds gradually. There is rarely one single moment where you injure it. Instead, the tissue slowly becomes overloaded. Common reasons include:

1. A sudden increase in activity

Started running again? Walking more? Training for an event? Even small increases in steps or load can overload the tissue before it has time to adapt.

2. Reduced calf or foot strength

Your foot and calf act like shock absorbers. When strength drops, more load transfers through the plantar fascia with every step.

3. Stiff ankles or calves

Limited ankle mobility often increases strain through the heel. You may not even notice the stiffness until someone assesses it properly.

4. Footwear changes

New shoes, worn-out shoes, or different supports can shift how load is distributed across the foot – sometimes significantly.

5. Age-related tissue changes

As we get older, tissues naturally become less resilient and slower to recover. This is especially common in people in their 40s, 50s and beyond.

6. Standing or walking-heavy jobs

Teachers, healthcare professionals, retail workers, tradespeople, and busy parents are on their feet for long periods every day. Over time, that load adds up.

At Compass Physio, we do not just look at the heel. We ask: why did the heel become overloaded in the first place? Because if we only chase symptoms, the pain often comes back.

Signs You Might Have Plantar Fasciitis

You may be dealing with plantar fasciitis or plantar fasciosis if you notice:

  • Sharp pain under the heel first thing in the morning
  • Pain after sitting or resting for a while
  • Symptoms easing once you get moving
  • Soreness after walking, running, or exercise
  • Pain when barefoot on hard floors
  • Tenderness directly under the heel
  • Symptoms gradually building over weeks or months

Heel pain often becomes more stubborn the longer it is left. Early assessment makes recovery easier and faster.

3 Mistakes That Often Make Plantar Fasciitis Worse

1. Resting completely

“If it hurts, I should stop moving.” It sounds logical – but complete rest often weakens the tissue further. The goal is not no load. The goal is the right amount of load. A structured progression almost always works better than doing nothing.

2. Stretching aggressively into pain

Hanging off a step to stretch the calf can sometimes help. But it can also irritate an already sensitive plantar fascia and flare symptoms. The right exercise matters. The right dose matters even more.

3. Only changing footwear

Supportive shoes can help, but they rarely solve the problem on their own. If strength, mobility, walking mechanics, or training load are contributing – and they usually are – the issue tends to return. Good treatment addresses why it developed, not just how to temporarily calm it down.

3 Exercises That Can Help Plantar Fasciitis

These exercises work best when done consistently and progressed over time. Start with the easier option and build from there.

Exercise 1 – Ball Roll for Morning Stiffness
What it helpsReduces stiffness and improves comfort first thing in the morning
How to do itRoll the sole of your foot over a tennis ball or massage ball. Spend extra time around tighter, more tender areas
Sets / Reps1–2 minutes per foot
Common mistakeRolling hard into pain. Gentle, sustained pressure works better than digging in
Progression: Do this before your first steps out of bed rather than after
Exercise 2 – Slow Calf Raises
What it helpsBuilds calf strength and helps the plantar fascia tolerate daily load better
How to do itStand holding a support. Rise slowly onto your toes. Pause at the top. Lower slowly back down. Start with both feet
Sets / Reps3 sets of 10–15 repetitions
Common mistakeGoing too fast. Slow, controlled movement is where the benefit comes from
Progression: Move to single-leg calf raises on a step with a heel drop below step height
Exercise 3 – Short Foot (Foot Strengthening)
What it helpsImproves intrinsic foot strength and arch support – often a missing piece in plantar fasciitis recovery
How to do itSitting or standing, gently try to shorten the foot by lifting the arch – without curling your toes. Hold. Relax
Sets / Reps2–3 sets of 10 holds
Common mistakeClawing the toes. Keep the movement small and subtle
Progression: Move from seated → standing → single-leg standing once the movement feels reliable
Stop if pain increases significantly. These exercises should challenge the tissue – not aggravate it.

What Our Patients Say

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

“Seen Sean a couple of times with a heel and foot problem despite it really affecting me stretching from the calf he managed to get me ready in a few weeks to complete a Tryka event. Thanks Sean and team.”

Google Review – Compass Physio

Why Generic Treatment Often Falls Short

At Compass Physio, we regularly see people who have already tried stretching, insoles, rest, new shoes, massage guns, and online exercises. Sometimes these help. Often, they only offer temporary relief.

That is because plantar heel pain is rarely just a heel problem. Our physiotherapy assessment process looks at the whole picture.

1

Detailed History

We look at previous injuries, activity levels, training load, walking and work demands, footwear history, and what has and has not worked before.

2

Clinical Assessment

We assess walking mechanics, foot movement, calf strength, ankle mobility, balance, and load tolerance.

3

Root Cause Mapping

We identify why this started, what is driving it, and what needs to improve. This gives both clarity and confidence for the road ahead.

4

Advanced Assessment (Where Needed)

In some cases, musculoskeletal ultrasound helps us better understand the plantar fascia and surrounding tissues – and rule out other causes of heel pain.

5

Structured Recovery Plan

Your plan is built around your goals – whether that is walking without pain, returning to the GAA, or getting back to running.

  • Pain reduction
  • Strength progression
  • Walking confidence
  • Return to exercise
  • Return to running
  • Long-term prevention
Our goal is not short-term relief. It is helping you move better, feel better, and stay active long term.

When Should You See a Physiotherapist?

Consider getting assessed if:

  • Pain has lasted more than 2 weeks
  • Symptoms are getting worse
  • Walking is becoming difficult
  • Exercise or training is being affected
  • You are limping in the mornings
  • The pain keeps coming back after settling

The earlier heel pain is addressed, the easier it usually is to manage.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is plantar fasciitis worse in the morning?
Overnight, the plantar fascia tightens slightly. When you first stand up, the tissue is suddenly asked to stretch and load again – causing that familiar sharp heel pain with the first few steps. Once it warms up, symptoms often ease.
Should I rest plantar fasciitis completely?
Usually not. Complete rest can reduce tissue strength and resilience. Most people respond better to modified activity and a gradual loading programme – doing the right amount, not nothing at all.
How long does plantar fasciitis take to heal?
It varies. Some people improve significantly within a few weeks. For others – especially where symptoms have been present for months – recovery can take 3–9 months depending on severity and consistency with rehab. According to research published in the Journal of Orthopaedic and Sports Physical Therapy, progressive loading programmes consistently outperform rest for plantar fasciitis recovery.
Can I still run with plantar fasciitis?
Sometimes. It depends on symptom severity and how well the tissue is tolerating load. Often, training can be modified rather than stopped completely. A proper assessment will give you a clear answer for your specific situation.
Will plantar fasciitis come back?
It can – if the underlying causes are not addressed. That is why building strength, restoring movement, and managing load properly is the foundation of good recovery, not just pain relief.
Is plantar fasciitis the same as a heel spur?
Not exactly. A heel spur is a bony growth that can develop alongside plantar fasciitis, but it is not always the source of pain. Many people have heel spurs with no symptoms at all.

To Summarise

Key Takeaways

  • Heel pain has a cause – it rarely appears overnight
  • Rest alone almost never fixes plantar fasciitis
  • Building tissue strength and managing load is the foundation of recovery
  • The sooner it is assessed, the easier it is to treat
  • Addressing the root cause is what prevents it from coming back

Ready to Get to the Root of Your Heel Pain?

If plantar fasciitis is affecting your walking, training, or day-to-day life, our team at Compass Physio can help. We will identify why it developed, build a structured recovery plan, and help you get back to what you love.

Move Better. Feel Better. Live Better.