Quality Affordable Running Shoes
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Go get fitted and be honest with the running store employees about your budget. Even if they can't find anything in your price range, they might be able to tell you about sales happening soon. Just don't buy shoes that aren't right for your feet in order to save money. Shoes are always cheaper than treatment for an injury.1
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The podiatrist actually told me to go to an expensive store, find the shoe that fits best and go home and order on Amazon. He also said certain colors are cheaper and discontinued shoes are also cheaper. If this is "parasitic" behavior as one commenter stated, it is also parasitic on the consumer to make a shoe for $5 and sell it for $100.
Your podiatrist is a dick......
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I like Asics. I got my last pair from Big 5 Sports for $60.0
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shaunshaikh wrote: »Good to know pent, that would definitely discourage me from what my game plan was.
It's actually the plan a lot of people use, get fitted, overpay for the shoe once, then order that model online until you can't find it anymore (I'm still ordering Saucuny Guide 7s three years after my orginal pair). If you have a model that worked for you in the past, see if it's still available online.1 -
Check out the benefits for your insurance company. I found out that I can get a 15% discount at my local running store through my insurance.1
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MeanderingMammal wrote: »DebLaBounty wrote: »You can go to a running store and have them bring you four or five models to try on. Have them analyze your gait so you'll know which ones fit you best. Ask them to write down the name and model number of your favorite two brands. Ask them when they might go on sale. If not on sale right then, go home and get on Amazon and see if you can get them cheaper there.
Pretty parasitic behaviour to be honest.
I tend to agree, but by the same token, good running shoe stores are by runners for runners.
Go in up front, explain where you're at, let them make the decision with full knowledge that you're on a budget and likely can't afford to buy from them today. If they offer to go through the fitting knowing your budget and that you're unlikely to buy today, but the relationship/helping a runner is worth the advertising(word of mouth is important for runners and running shoe stores) Go ahead. But be straight up when you walk in the door. Maybe you'll just buy the socks(another key part of running wear). But you'll be back. And you'll tell your friends.0 -
macgurlnet wrote: »macgurlnet wrote: »You can get older models of shoes from runningwarehouse.com, and they have a pretty good return policy. They also have a gait analysis option where you can send in a video of your running gait and they'll suggest a style of shoe. From there, you could purchase whatever you like in the category they recommend. I've gotten shoes for $50 there, since they were last year's model.
~Lyssa
this is exactly how you do it. find a shoe in the support style you need/like at a running store. if you don't know what you need have them fit you to the shoe that matches your running style, then politely leave and go find the shoe from the previous year (this must be done at a running store). there are a ton of websites that have discontinued shoes. if you find yourself liking something unique, say altra's, you can go to the manufacturers website and often order the discontinued shoes for the range you're suggesting.
Just going to put out there that I agree you shouldn't go to the store for a fitting and leave empty-handed, unless absolutely nothing you tried seems to work.
Also the shoe from the previous year is often subtly different from the current one. My Brooks Adrenaline 12's fit my feet PERFECTLY. The 14's did not.
Finding a shoe that works and buying a second or third pair of the same model elsewhere is what I end up doing - I support the local business, but I also save money overall.
~Lyssa
That was the same for me. The 12s were magical, the 13s a little iffy, the 14s(pain)0 -
My husband (that is older then me) always says, they are your feet how much are they worth? He didn't care and then as he for older he had to have insole to support his feet(We are talking $600 plus doc bills, x rays ect). Running too many years in crap shoes can result in foot doctor bills when you get older. Yes not everyone will experience that, but your feet are worth it!
My suggestion get gait anylisis, fitted and pay the amount, they might even have them on sale. my first brooks were on sale around $80 (normally around 120). I still buy from the local store when I get them on sale, but Ebay is amazing after you fine what works (with me it's an older model my store doesn't carry anymore anyway)0
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