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Why Blisters Form
A blister is your skin's response to repeated friction — the outer layer separates from the inner layer and fluid fills the gap as a protective mechanism. Three factors combine to create this: friction, moisture, and heat. Any one factor alone rarely causes a blister; all three together almost always do.
Friction comes from movement between your foot and the boot — either because the boot doesn't fit properly, your foot is sliding inside, or the sock is bunching. Moisture softens the skin, dramatically increasing friction coefficient. A wet foot blisters in a fraction of the time a dry foot does. Heat is an accelerant: warm skin is softer and more vulnerable, which is why long summer days produce more blisters than cool autumn hikes at the same pace.
Understanding this means understanding that blister prevention is always about reducing at least one of these three factors — ideally all three simultaneously.
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Try the Trekax Pack Calculator →9 Methods That Actually Work
Method 1: Choose the Right Socks
Impact: Very High
Sock choice is the single most cost-effective blister-prevention investment you can make. Cotton socks are the worst choice for hiking: they absorb sweat, stay wet, and dramatically increase friction. Wool and synthetic performance socks manage moisture actively — wool through absorption and slow release, synthetic through wicking.
Our top recommendation is Darn Tough Hiker Micro Crew socks. Made from Merino wool, they regulate temperature, resist odour, wick moisture effectively, and have a lifetime guarantee. The cushioning is just enough without adding bulk that causes fit issues inside the boot. For warm-weather hiking, the Darn Tough Light Hiker is a thinner option.
View Darn Tough Socks on AmazonSee our full hiking socks guide for a complete breakdown of the best options at every price point.
Method 2: Get Boot Fit Right
Impact: Very High
No blister-prevention technique compensates for a boot that doesn't fit. The key fit parameters: 5–10mm of space between your longest toe and the boot end (boots swell, as do feet); no lateral squeeze across the widest part of the forefoot; heel with minimal lift (slide your foot forward, you should be able to fit one finger behind the heel in an unlaced boot); no pressure points anywhere.
Always try boots on with hiking socks and in the afternoon when feet are at their largest. Walk on an incline if possible — toes pressing against the front on downhills is the most common cause of toe blisters. If you have wide feet, see our guide to the best hiking boots for wide feet.
Method 3: Use Anti-Blister Balm
Impact: High
Body Glide is the industry standard anti-friction balm. Apply it to known hot-spot areas before hiking: heels, little toes, balls of feet, anywhere a previous hike caused a blister. It creates a dry lubricating layer that reduces friction without making the skin slippery in a way that causes instability.
Apply before putting on socks, not after. Reapply on day 2 and beyond of multi-day trips. The small balm stick is worth carrying in your pack throughout any trip of more than one day.
View Body Glide on AmazonMethod 4: Wear Liner Socks
Impact: High
Liner socks are thin socks worn under your main hiking sock. The principle: friction occurs between the liner and the outer sock rather than between sock and skin. Liner socks also improve moisture management by wicking sweat away from the skin into the outer sock.
Injinji toe socks are the best-known liner option and solve a specific problem: toe-to-toe blisters, which regular liner socks can't prevent. Sealskinz Thin Mid Liner socks work well under a Darn Tough outer sock for general use. The combination adds minimal bulk if you size your boots correctly.
View Injinji Liner Socks on AmazonMethod 5: Learn Proper Lacing Techniques
Impact: Medium-High
How you lace your boot determines how your foot sits within it. Two lacing techniques address the most common blister causes:
Heel lock lacing: On boots with two lacing hooks at the top, loop each lace through the facing hook before crossing over. This creates a heel lock that stops the heel lifting during descents — the single biggest cause of heel blisters on technical terrain.
Window lacing: If you have a specific pressure point on the top of your foot, skip the eyelets immediately above it and resume lacing above. This relieves local pressure without loosening the overall fit.
Lacing should be firm but not cutting off circulation. If your toes go numb on descents, loosen the lower laces; if your heel lifts, tighten the upper laces and apply the heel lock.
Method 6: Apply Moleskin Proactively
Impact: Medium-High
Moleskin is a padded adhesive fabric. The standard guidance is to apply it to a blister once formed, but the more effective approach is proactive: apply it to known hot spots before hiking begins. Moleskin has enough thickness to reduce friction at high-pressure points and enough adhesion to stay in place through a full day of hiking.
Cut moleskin with rounded edges (square corners peel faster). Apply to dry, clean skin. For double protection on very problem areas, create a donut shape: a moleskin ring around a central piece of gel padding.
View Moleskin on AmazonMethod 7: Tape High-Risk Areas with Leukotape
Impact: High for known problem areas
Leukotape P is a rigid sports tape used by long-distance runners and thru-hikers for blister prevention on high-impact areas. Unlike moleskin or blister plasters, Leukotape doesn't slip or fold under sustained friction. Apply it to heels, pinky toes, or any area where previous hikes have consistently caused problems.
It requires a base layer of Fixomull stretch tape to prevent skin damage on removal — apply Fixomull first, then Leukotape over it. The combination is what ultramarathon runners use for 100-mile events; it works equally well for multi-day trekking.
View Leukotape on AmazonMethod 8: Break In Your Boots Properly
Impact: High
New boots are stiffer and have pressure points that soften and mould with use. Heading out on a long trail in unworn boots is the most reliable way to get blisters. The break-in protocol: start with 2–3 shorter hikes (5–8 miles) on varied terrain before any multi-day route. Wear the boots on daily errands and travel to add mileage without risk.
The materials matter: leather boots take longest to break in (30–50 miles), synthetic boots break in faster (10–20 miles), trail runners almost immediately. Modern technical boots with synthetic uppers typically feel comfortable within 10–15 miles of use. See our guide to breaking in hiking boots for a full protocol.
Method 9: Manage Moisture Actively
Impact: High on multi-day trips
Wet feet blister dramatically faster than dry feet. Moisture management across a multi-day trip: dry your boots fully each night (stuff with newspaper, use boot dryers, or leave in ventilated areas — never over a fire); rotate to a second pair of socks at lunch if conditions are wet; treat leather boots with waterproofing before the trip and at midpoint on longer routes; use waterproofing spray on synthetic boots' seams. Waterproof boots (Gore-Tex) help in rain but trap sweat — pair them with moisture-wicking socks for best results.
What to Do If You Get a Blister Mid-Hike
Prevention failed — here's the recovery protocol. Stop as soon as you notice a hot spot (a warm, tender area before a full blister forms). Apply moleskin, Leukotape, or a blister plaster immediately. The longer you walk on a developing blister, the worse it gets.
If a blister has already formed and is fluid-filled but not painful, leave it intact — the fluid protects the underlying skin. Pad around it with a donut of moleskin. If it's painful or in a location where continued pressure will pop it anyway, drain it with a sterilised needle at the blister's edge, press out the fluid, keep the skin intact as a protective cover, and apply a blister plaster over the top.
Compeed blister plasters are the best widely-available treatment: they act as a second skin, reducing friction and protecting the damaged area. Apply to clean, dry skin and leave in place until they fall off naturally — removing them early risks taking the blister roof with them.
View Compeed on AmazonFrequently Asked Questions
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