ASICS Wide Running Shoes: Why a Japanese Last Fits Wide & Asian Feet
There’s a reason ASICS keeps coming up in conversations about wide feet — and especially about Asian feet. It’s a Japanese brand, and its shoes were designed, from the last up, around the feet of the market it grew up serving. Broader forefoot, a little more room. That’s not marketing; it’s geometry. (The foot-scan data behind that claim is in the width-first guide.)
So while New Balance gives you the widest letters, ASICS often fits wide feet well before you even reach for a wide size — and then it offers the wide sizes too.
The widths ASICS actually offers
ASICS isn’t shy with width grades on its core running models. The flagship trainers run D (regular), 2E (wide), and 4E (extra-wide):
- Gel-Kayano — D / 2E / 4E
- GT-2000 — D / 2E / 4E
- Gel-Nimbus — D / 2E / 4E
That’s a genuine width ladder on the shoes most runners actually buy, not a token option buried in one colorway.
The ASICS sweet spot: wide feet that also roll in
Here’s the thing most guides miss. Wide feet and overpronation — the arch and ankle rolling inward — very often come as a pair, especially with a flatter, broader foot. ASICS happens to be strongest exactly there. Its best-known shoes are stability shoes built to gently correct that roll. So for a wide, flat-ish foot, ASICS isn’t just roomy — it’s solving two problems at once.
Gel-Kayano — the flagship, wide and supportive
The Kayano is ASICS’ premium stability trainer: a tall, comfort-loaded stack with structured support, offered all the way to 4E. If you have wide feet, want plush cushioning, and need your arch held up over long miles, this is the headline shoe.
GT-2000 — the lighter, cheaper stability pick
The GT-2000 is the Kayano’s leaner, more affordable sibling — still stability, still in 2E and 4E, but lighter and less shoe underfoot. For mild-to-moderate overpronation and a wide foot that doesn’t want a max-stack monster, it’s the value sweet spot.
Gel-Nimbus — for wide, neutral feet
Not everyone with wide feet overpronates. If your stride is neutral, skip the stability shoes and go to the Nimbus — ASICS’ plush, max-cushion neutral trainer, also available in 2E and 4E. It’s the closest ASICS equivalent to a “just give me room and softness” shoe.
So which one?
- Wide feet + rolling inward (overpronation)? → Kayano (plush) or GT-2000 (lighter, cheaper).
- Wide feet, neutral stride? → Nimbus.
- Not sure if you overpronate? → A quick gait check at a running store settles it — and it’s the single most useful thing you can do before buying.
As always: confirm your width is offered on the current version before you fall for a model, and measure late in the day.
Comparing brands? Start with the width-first guide to running shoes for wide feet, or see the New Balance 2E & 4E guide.