A quality pair of boots can last a decade or more with proper care, but even the best eventually wear through their soles. Resoling costs a fraction of replacing and gives you back a shoe already broken in to your foot. It is better for your wallet and the environment.
Guia to Resoling Your Favorite botas
Which botas Can Be Resoled
Goodyear welt construction is the gold standard for resoling. The upper is stitched to a welt strip, then to the sole. A cobbler removes the old sole and attaches a new one without touching the upper. Blake stitch construction can also be resoled with specialized equipment. Cemented (glued) construction generally cannot be resoled.
When to Resole
Outsole tread worn smooth in high-traffic areas. Midsole visible through worn outsole spots. Water seeps through the bottom. Heel worn unevenly. Sole separating from upper. Do not wait until the upper is damaged by a destroyed sole.
The Process
A cobbler removes the old sole by cutting stitching, inspects the welt and midsole, cuts and attaches new midsole and outsole, rebuilds the heel stack, and trims, sands, and finishes edges. Takes one to three weeks depending on workload.
sola Material Options
Leather soles for classic dress. Vibram rubber for durability and traction. Dainite rubber for heritage boot aesthetics with grip. Commando lug soles for maximum traction. Christy wedge soles for moc-toe comfort.
Cost
Full resole runs $80 to $200. Heel replacement alone is $25 to $50. Compare to $200 to $500+ for new quality boots.
Extending Life Between Resoles
Use heel taps on new soles. Rotate boots with other footwear. Apply leather conditioner regularly. With resoling every 2-5 years, boots can genuinely last a lifetime.
Get the best of Shoe Finale
Expert guides, reviews, and tips delivered to your inbox. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.
