Today, put on your stiffest-soled shoes and back off anything that bends the big toe up hard — deep squats, hill walks, sprint push-off. That alone often calms the joint within days.
Picture a doorstop wedged under a door. The door can only open so far before it jams. A small bony lump grows on top of your big-toe joint, so every time you push off and the toe tries to bend up, it slams into that lump. That impact is the pain, and forcing the toe higher just drives it harder into the lump.
The whole game is to stop the toe reaching its painful end-range — and to escalate by the stage of the arthritis, not by hope.
Tier 1 · Strongest agreement
Stiff or rocker-soled shoes with a roomy toe box, a Morton's extension orthotic (a firm insole that splints the joint so it can't over-bend), activity modification, and anti-inflammatories as a short bridge. Low-risk, often enough on its own, and a documented prerequisite before surgery.
Tier 1 · End-stage anchor
The durable gold standard once the arthritis reaches the middle of the joint's movement. It removes pain by removing motion — a real trade-off, but reliable, and younger patients still return to sport afterwards.
Tier 2 · Moderate evidence
For grade 2–3 disease with the joint space still preserved. Joint-preserving, with strong results in well-selected patients (one series: over 90% pain relief, 4% needing further surgery at 4.5 years). It only works while the joint surface is reasonably intact — the spur is not the whole disease.
Tier 2 · The physical-therapy lever
The only physical-therapy approach with trial support, useful in early disease. Avoid forcing the toe into the painful upward range in advanced disease.
Tier 3 · Contested
Preserves motion, and one 5-year trial found a cartilage implant on par with fusion. But regulators (NICE) restrict it because of insufficient durability data and high revision rates in some series. A selected-patient choice, not a default.
Concrete checkpoints — not "when it feels ready."
If any of these are present, this is not routine arthritis. Get it checked before treating it as a mechanical problem.
Refer to: A&E or urgent care for a hot, feverish joint · GP / rheumatology for suspected gout or inflammatory arthritis · foot-and-ankle surgery for advanced or failing disease.
Today, switch to your stiffest-soled shoes and back off anything that bends your big toe up hard — deep squats, hill walks, sprint push-off.
The pain comes from the toe jamming into a bone spur at the top of its range. Stop reaching that range and the joint usually settles within days — no stretching required.
Takes 2 minutes. No equipment needed.
Recognize, stage, offload, refer. The conservative-first pathway and the role of fusion for end-stage disease are well-supported and universally agreed. The catch: the surgical evidence is almost entirely retrospective and abstract-only, and the conservative-care arm is built on expert consensus with no high-quality trial behind any specific shoe or insole.
A pragmatic trial (200+ people) randomizing early-to-mid big-toe arthritis to structured conservative care versus early spur-shaving surgery, followed for 2+ years, tracking how many end up needing surgery anyway — that would settle whether conservative care substitutes for surgery or just delays it.
A large registry study (500+ implants, 10+ years) reporting how many cartilage implants survive without revision versus fusions — one 5-year device trial can't answer this.
Go Deeper
Tired of guessing which aches need a specialist and which you can manage yourself? The Verdict breaks down one joint or injury every week — free, evidence-scored, no hype.
Join The Verdict — freeHallux rigidus is osteoarthritis of the first metatarsophalangeal joint — the base of the big toe. Unlike most arthritis, the cartilage wears on the top of the joint first, and the body lays down a bone spur (a dorsal osteophyte) there. That spur mechanically blocks the toe from bending upward and pinches painfully at the end of the range — exactly the position the big toe must reach to push off when you walk or run.
This is the single fact that explains everything: it's a top-of-joint impingement problem, not a generic "stiff joint." Doctors stage it from grade 0 to 4. Early on, pain is only at the very end of the upward bend; in advanced disease the pain reaches into the middle of the joint's movement — and that's the line where joint-preserving treatments stop working.
This is a clinical-plus-X-ray diagnosis, not a special-test diagnosis — there's no validated orthopedic test with published accuracy numbers for it, so we don't invent any.
Key differentials: gout (the critical acute, hot mimic — the big toe is its classic home), sesamoiditis (pain on the underside, not the top), turf toe (an acute sprain), and hallux valgus (a bunion, which can coexist).
Cartiva 5-year cohort, 2019 (PMID 30501401)
A synthetic cartilage implant preserved motion and matched fusion at 24 months, with gains holding at 5 years.
NICE HTG87, 2023; series revision up to 27%
Regulators restrict joint replacement to consented, monitored use — durability data is thin and revision rates run high.
Fusion remains the durable end-stage anchor. Motion preservation is the selling point; the revision rate is the bill. Replacement is a fully-informed, selected-patient choice — not a default.
Cheilectomy, fusion, and implant results come from case series and registries, not head-to-head trials. The direction of effect is reliable; precise comparative numbers are not.
Footwear and orthotics are recommended on mechanical logic and expert consensus, not RCTs. The silent failure point is whether people actually wear the stiff shoe consistently.
The literature often pools big-toe arthritis with bunions, blurring outcomes. Stage every case explicitly before choosing a path.
The honest truth on surgery: most people with early-to-mid hallux rigidus do well for a long time on footwear changes, an insole, and modifying load — they never need surgery, or they defer it for years. No high-quality trial puts a number on conservative success, but it's low-risk and frequently enough. Once the disease reaches the middle of the joint, conservative care stops being enough, and fusion is the durable, evidence-backed answer despite costing permanent toe motion. There's no agenda here: try conservative first because it works often and risks little, then escalate by the stage of the arthritis.
Physio conditions reviewed against clinical evidence. What works, what doesn't, and what to do — from a practising physiotherapist.
Subscribe freeThe Verdict is built by the same team behind Precision Metrics — a physique and health coaching practice with 300+ clients coached. Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT and Luke Holbrook lead the coaching.
Book a free consultationConviction-scored verdicts on supplements, nutrition, training, physio, and recovery.