New Balance 709 Sizing Guide: True to Size? (102 Pairs)
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The New Balance 709 generally fits true to size. Based on 102 owner-reported pairs in the Feetlot database, the average wearer takes their normal sneaker size and gets a secure, supportive fit straight out of the box. Most people: stay true to size. Wide-footed wearers should reach for one of New Balance's wider width options rather than sizing up, and narrow-footed wearers can go down half a size for a closer hold around the heel and instep.
New Balance 709 Sizing — What 102 Pairs in the Feetlot Database Tell Us
The New Balance 709 is a leather walking and lifestyle shoe tracked across 102 owner-reported pairs in the Feetlot database. The fit pattern across those owners is consistent: residual variation sits around 0.20 to 0.25 size units, in line with the population-wide norm Feetlot sees for normal sneakers. The takeaway is steady — the 709 fits true to size, so most wearers buy their nominal number rather than adjusting up or down.
Part of why the 709 reads so consistent is the build. It is a supportive leather shoe on a fairly standard New Balance last, with a structured heel and a roomy, walking-oriented toe box. Length runs true; the comfort owners report comes from the cushioning and the width options, not from any quirk in how the shoe is sized.
Should You Size Up or Down in New Balance 709?
Standard fit (most people)
Stay true to size. The 709's leather upper and structured heel hold the foot securely at the nominal number, and the walking-oriented toe box gives the toes room without the shoe feeling loose. The leather softens slightly over the first wears, but the length stays the same, so there is no need to size up for break-in.
Wide feet
Stay true to size on length and choose a wider width rather than sizing up. New Balance is one of the few brands that offers the 709 in multiple widths, and a wider build (rather than a longer one) is the right fix for a wide foot. Sizing up a full size to chase width leaves the heel loose and lets the foot slide forward; the correct width at true length is far more comfortable.
Narrow feet
Stay true to size, or go down half a size for a closer hold. Narrow feet can find the standard-width 709 a touch roomy through the midfoot, and half a size down tightens the heel and instep. If a narrower width is available in your size, that is the better fix than going short — the leather will not shrink to fill extra length.
Width options across the 709 range
The defining feature of the 709 is that it comes in a spread of widths rather than a single fit. The length sizing is the same across every width — true to size for most — so pick your normal number and then choose the width that matches your foot. Owners who switch from a standard-width sneaker to the correct 709 width usually find the fit improves without any change to the size number itself.
How New Balance 709 Compares to Other Sneakers
The New Balance 709 sits squarely in line with most lifestyle sneakers on length. According to Feetlot data, the 709 fits at essentially the same numerical size as the Nike Air Force 1, Air Jordan 1, Vans Authentic, Nike Air Max 90, Nike Blazer Mid '77, Air Jordan 4, adidas Superstar, Nike SB Dunk Low, and Nike Air Max 97. If a wearer takes size 10 in any of those, they take size 10 in the 709 too.
A couple of models shift the number by half a size. According to Feetlot data, the Converse Chuck Taylor runs about half a size bigger-fitting than the 709, as does the boot-style Clarks Desert Boot — so buy a half size smaller number in those than in the 709, or read the other way, expect to add half a size when moving to the 709. The adidas YEEZY Boost 350 V2 goes the opposite direction: it runs about half a size smaller-fitting, so you take half a size larger number in the YEEZY than in the 709.
Sign in to Feetlot and add a few of your other sneakers to get a personalized 709 size recommendation calibrated to your actual foot rather than to the population average.
New Balance 709 Size Chart (US / EU / UK)
| US Men's | US Women's | UK | EU |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7 | 8.5 | 6.5 | 40 |
| 7.5 | 9 | 7 | 40.5 |
| 8 | 9.5 | 7.5 | 41 |
| 8.5 | 10 | 8 | 42 |
| 9 | 10.5 | 8.5 | 42.5 |
| 9.5 | 11 | 9 | 43 |
| 10 | 11.5 | 9.5 | 44 |
| 10.5 | 12 | 10 | 44.5 |
| 11 | 12.5 | 10.5 | 45 |
| 11.5 | 13 | 11 | 45.5 |
| 12 | 13.5 | 11.5 | 46 |
| 13 | 14.5 | 12.5 | 47.5 |
Common Sizing Mistakes
- Sizing up a full size for wide feet. The 709 comes in multiple widths — that is the fix for a wide foot, not a longer shoe. Going up a full size leaves slack in the heel and lets the foot slide forward, which is worse than the original tightness.
- Ignoring the width options entirely. Many wearers buy the standard width by default and assume the 709 fits oddly. Choosing the right width at true length is the single biggest improvement most people can make to the fit.
- Applying Air Force 1 sizing. The AF1 is roomy enough that many owners size it down half. The 709 fits true to size, so do not carry the size-down habit over — buy your nominal number.
- Buying small expecting the leather to give. The leather upper softens and forms to the foot over the first wears, but the last does not lengthen. A too-short 709 stays too short.
- Treating it like a running shoe and sizing up for toe room. The 709 is a walking and lifestyle shoe with a generous toe box at true size. Sizing up for extra room usually leaves it sloppy rather than comfortable.
How Feetlot Computes These Numbers
Every New Balance 709 sizing recommendation on Feetlot is the output of a global offset model fit to over 100,000 owner-reported shoe records. Each shoe gets a single number — its "size offset" — that captures how much its sizing drifts from the reference shoe (the Nike Air Force 1). When a Feetlot user provides their size in any tracked sneaker, the model recovers their true foot baseline and recommends the matching 709 size.
This works better than the more common pairwise approach because Feetlot uses the entire wardrobe graph. A YEEZY 350 owner contributes data about how YEEZY fits relative to AF1 owners, which links to 709 owners through the chain of shared wardrobes. Even when two users own zero shoes in common, the users in between transmit a consistent recommendation. The result: sizing advice that holds up no matter how unusual a wardrobe is.
Add the shoes you already own and Feetlot predicts your size in the New Balance 709 and 2,000+ others, from 100,000+ verified owner pairs.