Sit, straighten your knee, pull your foot and toes up toward you, then point them away. 10 slow reps. If a light tingling in your sole eases as you floss the nerve, that fits tarsal tunnel. If it sharply worsens, stop and get it checked.
Ankle / Foot · Nerve Entrapment
A trapped nerve at the inside of your ankle that makes the sole of your foot burn, tingle, or go numb. The carpal tunnel of the foot, where the cause behind the squeeze decides the fix.
CONVICTION: MODERATEThere are no large trials for tarsal tunnel specifically, so this hierarchy is graded against a thin, mostly retrospective evidence base. The honest headline: treat the cause, not the label.
Find and address what is compressing the nerve. A structural cause on imaging (ganglion cyst, an extra muscle, a bony coalition, a varicose vein, or a tumour) is the group that responds well and durably to surgical decompression. This is the single decision that most changes the outcome.
Release of the roof of the tunnel (and the deep fascia beyond it). Reliable when there's a clear lesion; far less predictable for "no-cause" cases, with a real complication rate. Done earlier rather than later to avoid the nerve scarring.
For the common idiopathic (no-lump) type, while the cause is being ruled out.
Tier 2 — Conservative physical therapyLOW Orthosis, nerve gliding, footwear and activity modification. Low-risk and sensible first-line for no-lesion cases, but borrowed from carpal tunnel practice (no tarsal-tunnel trial behind it).
Tier 2 — Corticosteroid injection (often ultrasound-guided)MODERATE Clinician-delivered. Calms swelling around the nerve for roughly 3–6 months. A temporary adjunct, not a cure for a structural cause.
Tier 3 — Endoscopic or ultrasound-guided releaseEMERGING Minimally-invasive alternatives to open surgery (faster back on your feet, low recurrence in small series). No head-to-head trial proves they equal open decompression.
You usually modify rather than stop. Tick these off before returning to full load:
Most tarsal tunnel is harmless and treatable. But these signs mean you need a scan and a clinician, not exercises.
Refer to: GP for a systemic check, or Foot & Ankle / Orthopaedics for a suspected lump or progressive nerve loss. A rare tumour can masquerade as tarsal tunnel, so a persistent or worsening lump gets imaged.
Sit down, straighten your knee, pull your foot and toes up toward you, then point them away. Do 10 slow reps.
This gently "flosses" the nerve. If a light tingling in your sole eases as you do it, that fits tarsal tunnel. If it sharply worsens or you have any red-flag sign above, stop and get it checked.
Takes under 2 minutes. No equipment needed.
Conviction: MODERATE
The diagnosis-is-etiology-driven story and the "no gold-standard test" caution are well-supported across decades of retrospective work. But there are no tarsal-tunnel-specific randomized trials, meta-analyses, or Cochrane reviews. Surgical "success rates" come from single-center series weighted toward operable lesions, and the conservative arm is extrapolated from carpal tunnel guidelines.
A prospective cohort using one standardized diagnostic definition that randomizes idiopathic (no-lesion) patients to structured conservative care vs early decompression, with a blinded function score at 12 months, would finally give the conservative-vs-surgery decision real evidence instead of cause-flavored opinion.
A large, blinded diagnostic-accuracy study showing nerve conduction misses far fewer than the ~19% of confirmed cases reported in surgical series would move this from "confirms but can't exclude" toward a true rule-out test.
Go Deeper
Tired of guessing whether your foot pain is "just plantar fasciitis" or something else? The Verdict breaks down one injury a week, in plain English, with the evidence. Free.
Join The Verdict — free weekly protocolsThe posterior tibial nerve runs behind the inside ankle bone through a fixed-size tunnel roofed by a band of tissue (the flexor retinaculum), then splits into the branches that supply the sole. Anything that raises pressure inside that tunnel, or tethers and stretches the nerve as the foot moves, squeezes it and produces burning, pins-and-needles, and numbness across the sole.
The causes split into two buckets, and which bucket you're in decides everything. Structural (better prognosis): ganglion cysts, an accessory muscle, a bony coalition, varicose veins, or rarely a tumour. Idiopathic (guarded prognosis): no lump, often linked to a collapsing flat/valgus foot, past trauma, diabetes, or thyroid disease.
There is no single confirming test. A 2026 best-evidence review of 82 studies and 4,213 patients found no agreed diagnostic standard. Diagnosis is a stack of findings:
Top differential: plantar fasciitis (mechanical first-step heel pain, not a burning nerve pattern, and the two can co-exist). Also screen the lower back and the other foot to rule out a nerve root or a diabetic nerve problem.
Older surgical series
Decompression gives "excellent results"; nerve conduction is the objective standard.
Recent evidence (2026 review; 2022 outcome series)
No diagnostic gold standard exists. Only about half of operated patients would do the surgery again, and results are far better when a structural lesion is present. A normal nerve test misses roughly 1 in 5 cases.
Current best practice: build the diagnosis from a stack, not one test, and operate selectively by cause, not on the label.
No physical-therapy clinical practice guideline specific to tarsal tunnel syndrome was identified as of June 2026. Conservative recommendations are extrapolated from the carpal tunnel guideline.
No randomized trial, meta-analysis, or Cochrane review exists for tarsal tunnel. Surgical "success rates" carry selection bias toward patients with an operable lesion and use satisfaction, not blinded function, as the endpoint.
When dozens of studies use different criteria with variable sensitivities, pooled success figures may be comparing patients who don't have the same condition.
Orthoses, nerve gliding, and activity modification are reasonable defaults borrowed from carpal tunnel, not demonstrated for tarsal tunnel specifically.
Surgery for tarsal tunnel is reliable when there's something specific to decompress and unreliable when there isn't. The numbers: about 72% satisfaction in one 47-patient series, but with a 30% perioperative complication rate, and in a separate cohort only 51% would repeat the operation. Results are consistently better with a confirmed structural lesion. For idiopathic disease, that's why a genuine conservative trial comes first, while staying alert for the lump that changes the plan. The cause is the prognosis.
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.