New Balance 997 Sport Sizing Guide: True to Size? (30 Pairs)
Add the shoes you already own and Feetlot predicts your size in the New Balance 997 Sport and 2,000+ others, from 100,000+ verified owner pairs.
The New Balance 997 Sport generally fits true to size. Based on 30 owner-reported pairs in the Feetlot database, the average wearer takes their normal size and gets a secure fit out of the box. Most people: stay true to size. The modernized Bootie construction and EVA midsole give a sock-like wrap, so the 997 Sport runs cleaner and snugger than the classic made-in-US 997. Narrow feet can go down half a size; wide feet may prefer true to size.
New Balance 997 Sport Sizing — What 30 Pairs in the Feetlot Database Tell Us
The New Balance 997 Sport has 30 owner-reported pairs in the Feetlot database. The fit pattern across those owners is consistent: residual variation sits in the typical Feetlot range of roughly 0.20–0.25 size units, meaning the 997 Sport fits a given foot length predictably across people. The common "true to size" advice for the 997 Sport lines up with what Feetlot data actually shows for the average wearer.
The 997 Sport is the modernized lifestyle take on the 997 — it swaps the structured made-in-US last and ENCAP midsole for a one-piece Bootie upper over a lighter EVA midsole. That sock-style construction wraps the midfoot closely, which is why the 997 Sport feels snugger than the classic 997 even at the same length. It is also a distinct shoe from the budget 997H, which uses its own last and tends to feel slightly different through the toe box.
Should You Size Up or Down in New Balance 997 Sport?
Standard fit (most people)
Stay true to size. The Bootie upper hugs the foot from the first wear and the EVA midsole needs no real break-in, so a true-to-size purchase gives a secure, locked-in feel right away. The 997 Sport is one of the models in the Feetlot dataset where the average wearer does not adjust away from their nominal size.
Wide feet
Stay true to size, or go up half if the midfoot feels tight. The one-piece Bootie wrap is snugger through the instep than a traditional layered upper, so wide-footed wearers feel the hold more than they would in the structured 997. New Balance also offers the 997 family in wide (2E) widths in some colorways — a wide width at true length beats sizing up a full size, which leaves the heel sloppy.
Narrow feet
Going down half a size works well for narrow feet who want a closer hold. The Bootie construction already wraps the foot, so most narrow wearers are fine true to size; drop half a size only if you find true-to-size leaves slack at the heel. The EVA midsole and knit-style upper do not stretch in length, so do not go a full size down.
997 Sport vs 997 vs 997H
These are three different shoes despite the shared "997" name. The made-in-US 997 has a more structured last; many wearers find it fits true to size as well, but its firmer build feels less snug than the Sport. The 997H is the budget version on its own last and can feel a touch different through the toe box. The 997 Sport sits in between — modern lifestyle styling with the closest, sock-like wrap of the three. If you are moving from a classic 997 to the Sport, keep the same length number.
How New Balance 997 Sport Compares to Other Sneakers
The New Balance 997 Sport sits right in line with most lifestyle sneakers on length. According to Feetlot data, the 997 Sport fits at essentially the same numerical size as the Nike Air Force 1, Air Jordan 1, Vans Authentic, Converse Chuck Taylor (Core Ox), and adidas Superstar. If a wearer takes size 10 in any of those, they take size 10 in the 997 Sport too.
The notable exceptions where the numerical size shifts: the 997 Sport runs about half a size larger-fitting than the adidas YEEZY Boost 350 V2, Nike Air Max 90, Nike Blazer Mid '77, Air Jordan 4, Nike SB Dunk Low, and Nike Air Max 97 — so you would take half a size up in those models compared to your 997 Sport size. The reverse is true for boot-style models: the Clarks Desert Boot runs roomier, so go half a size down from your 997 Sport number when buying those.
Sign in to Feetlot and add a few of your other sneakers to get a personalized 997 Sport size recommendation calibrated to your actual foot rather than to the population average.
New Balance 997 Sport 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 | 41.5 |
| 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 | 46.5 |
| 13 | 14.5 | 12.5 | 47.5 |
Common Sizing Mistakes
- Sizing up because it is a New Balance. Some older NB models ran large, but the 997 Sport fits true to size in Feetlot data. Going up adds slack the snug Bootie upper will never tighten back.
- Treating the 997 Sport like the classic 997. Same length, but the Sport's one-piece Bootie wraps the midfoot tighter than the structured 997. Wide feet feel this most.
- Confusing the 997 Sport with the 997H. They are different shoes on different lasts. A size that fits in one is a starting point, not a guarantee, in the other — check the fit through the toe box.
- Buying small expecting stretch. The EVA midsole and Bootie upper soften slightly but do not grow in length. A 997 Sport that is too short stays too short.
- Ignoring width options. Wide-footed wearers reach for a longer size when a 2E width at true length would give room without a sloppy heel.
How Feetlot Computes These Numbers
Every New Balance 997 Sport 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 997 Sport 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 New Balance owners (many of whom own both), and so on. Even when two users share zero shoes directly, the chain of users in between transmits 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 997 Sport and 2,000+ others, from 100,000+ verified owner pairs.