You know the feeling: the shoes looked perfect, the color was right, the heel wasn’t too scary, and then an hour later, your feet are negotiating for their freedom. Before you try any home fix, pause for a quick reality check. Shoes can feel tighter later in the day because feet naturally swell, and fit problems are not always about length alone. Width matters too, and one foot is often slightly bigger than the other, which is why measuring both feet and checking fit later in the day gives you a much more honest answer.
Now for the important part: not every tight shoe should be “rescued.” Leather usually gives a little over time, especially in width, but shoes do not magically become much longer. If your toes are jammed against the front, or the shoe feels sharply painful rather than just snug, stretching probably will not turn it into a great fit. In that case, an exchange, a wider fit, or sizing up with an insole is often the smarter move.
Also, skip DIY stretching if you have diabetes, poor circulation, or peripheral neuropathy, because even small rubbing or hidden pressure can turn into a bigger foot problem. And if the shoes are already causing blisters, redness, corns, calluses, or nail pain, that is your cue to stop forcing a romance that simply is not meant to be.