Day Of Surgery
Protected walking begins the same day in a post-op shoe. The early goal is safe mobility while protecting the correction.
Bunion surgery recovery depends on the procedure, the severity of the deformity, X-ray findings, swelling, medical history, and whether other forefoot procedures are performed at the same time.
At The Bunion Cure, the procedure plan is built around immediate but limited protected walking. If a patient could not safely begin limited protected walking after a procedure, that procedure would not be performed here.
The timeline below describes a typical minimally invasive bunionectomy recovery process. Your exact instructions may be different.
Protected walking begins the same day in a post-op shoe. The early goal is safe mobility while protecting the correction.
Pain and inflammation are often highest during the first few days. Elevation, rest, and activity limits matter most here.
Walking stays limited while swelling control is emphasized. Many patients are told to pace activity and elevate frequently.
Patients leave with immediate but limited protected walking instructions. This means walking is allowed, but it is not normal walking. The post-op shoe, dressing, temporary pin, and activity limits all protect the correction while early healing begins.
Patients should expect to limit time on the foot. Walking is for necessary movement, not errands, exercise, shopping, or testing the foot.
Call the office if pain worsens despite instructions, if the dressing or pin area is concerning, or if symptoms feel outside the expected recovery pattern.
A common guideline in the post-op education is about 15 minutes per hour on your feet and 45 minutes per hour elevating and recovering, unless the care team gives different instructions.
This stage is not about pushing activity. Patients who do too much too early often notice more throbbing, more swelling, and a harder time getting comfortable.
The post-op shoe is still used. Swelling still drives the rules, and the foot should still be protected from impact, twisting, crowded shoes, and unnecessary time on the feet.
Many minimally invasive bunionectomy patients transition to a roomy normal or athletic shoe around this time if swelling allows. Shoe timing can vary. Some patients need more time before a normal shoe feels realistic.
Week 4 is a useful milestone, but it is not the finish line.
This stage often requires patience. Walking may feel easier, but the foot may still need elevation, compression, roomy shoes, and careful pacing.
This is often when patients are walking more naturally and building confidence, but return to higher-impact activity still depends on healing and clearance.
Swelling often begins improving more quickly after this stage, but some residual swelling can last longer, especially after more activity or if multiple procedures were performed.
Dr. Sullivan uses the exam, weight-bearing X-rays, and recovery goals to determine the safest plan.
Call promptly for worsening pain, fever, spreading redness, drainage, calf pain, shortness of breath, dressing concerns, pin concerns, new numbness, or anything that makes walking feel unsafe.
Reviewed by: Dr. Jordan Sullivan Last reviewed: June 8, 2026 Last updated: June 8, 2026
A common minimally invasive bunionectomy recovery process includes immediate but limited protected walking, swelling control during the first 2 weeks, pin removal around 4 weeks, shoe transition around 4 weeks if swelling allows, improved walking by weeks 8 to 12, and higher-impact activity only when cleared.
Yes. At The Bunion Cure, immediate but limited protected walking is part of the procedure plan. The exact limits depend on the procedure and post-op instructions.
Pain and inflammation are often highest during the first 3 to 4 days, then typically improve as the early inflammation settles.
The temporary pin is commonly removed around 4 weeks after surgery, after follow-up evaluation and X-rays.
Many minimally invasive bunionectomy patients transition to a roomy normal or athletic shoe around 4 weeks after pin removal if swelling allows. Some patients need more time.
Swelling often increases as activity increases, especially while the bone and soft tissues are still healing. This does not always mean something is wrong, but it is a reason to pace activity and follow the care team’s instructions.
Running, jumping, and higher-impact activity are usually delayed until healing is strong enough and the patient is cleared by the care team.
It can. Combined procedures may change shoe timing, swelling, dressing care, activity limits, and follow-up needs.
Yes, but the bandage needs to stay clean and dry. A shower shoe or waterproof shower cover is an excellent device to have on hand because it creates a tight gasket seal around the ankle and helps protect the bandage while showering. The key point is that the bandage should stay dry.
High-impact and ballistic activities such as running, jumping, pounding, cutting, tennis, and pickleball generally restart around 10 to 12 weeks after surgery, once bone healing is strong enough and the patient has been cleared. Do not return at your previous intensity right away. Build back slowly and cautiously, and use pain as your guide. Many patients can resume these activities around 10 to 12 weeks and then build back toward normal over the next 1 to 2 months.
Use these pages to connect the recovery timeline with walking, risks, travel logistics, candidacy, and procedure comparisons.
Walking After SurgeryLearn what immediate but limited protected walking means in the early recovery period.Read more
Minimally Invasive Bunionectomy vs LapiplastyUnderstand osteotomy healing, fusion, hardware, stiffness, and recovery differences.Compare
Risks And ComplicationsUnderstand swelling, recurrence, healing concerns, and when to call the office.Review risks
Return To WorkDesk jobs, standing jobs, work accommodations, and return-to-work timing after bunion surgery.Plan work
Traveling For SurgerySee how out-of-town patients plan follow-up, flights, and pin removal.Plan travel
Am I A Candidate?Review symptoms, health factors, and anatomy that affect procedure choice.Check candidacy
Minimally Invasive Bunionectomy vs TraditionalCompare smaller-incision minimally invasive correction with traditional open bunion surgery.Compare
Before And After PhotosSee examples of bunion and hammertoe correction results.View gallery
Dr. Sullivan and the medical team can review your foot, X-rays, symptoms, goals, and risk factors to explain what plan makes sense.