The barefoot footwear market in Europe has grown significantly in recent years. From niche specialist brands to mainstream players adding minimalist lines, the options have multiplied — and so has the confusion about what actually constitutes genuine barefoot footwear.
The Non-Negotiables: What Makes a Shoe Genuinely Barefoot
A shoe can only be called genuinely barefoot if it satisfies all of these:
- Zero drop (0-4mm): anything above 4mm introduces biomechanical compromise regardless of marketing claims.
- Wide toe box: the widest part of the shoe should align with the widest part of your foot. Toes should spread without touching the sides.
- Flexible sole: bendable by hand across its full length and width. A rigid sole limits natural foot movement regardless of thickness.
- Thin sole: ideally 5-10mm total stack height. Enough to protect, thin enough to transmit ground feedback.
- No arch support: flat, neutral footbed that lets the foot's own musculature do its job.
What to Watch Out For in Marketing
Common misleading claims: "natural movement technology" on shoes with 8mm drop; "wide toe box" where the widest point is at the arch, not the toes; "flexible" shoes with rigid shanks. Look past the claims. Look at the specifications.
The Nude Foot: The Functional Barefoot Sneaker
The Nude Foot was designed in Spain specifically for the functional athlete who needs a single shoe that works across training contexts and everyday life. Zero drop. Wide toe box matching the natural foot shape. Thin, protective, flexible sole. The aesthetics of a premium lifestyle sneaker. The first functional barefoot sneaker — not a specialist piece of equipment but the shoe you actually want to wear all day, every day.
Discover The Nude Foot — built in Spain, designed for European athletes. Zero drop, real foot shape, real performance.

