# Are OOFOS good for dancers

Source: https://dancerdeals.com/quick-answers/are-oofos-good-for-dancers
Markdown: https://dancerdeals.com/quick-answers/are-oofos-good-for-dancers.md
Last updated: 2026-05-27

> When your dancer's feet are wrecked after class or a long competition day and you're wondering whether the OOFOS slides everyone seems to wear are worth it for a dancer specifically.

## Quick read

Short answer: yes, for what they are, which is an off-the-floor recovery shoe, not a dance shoe and not a medical device. The OOFOS OOahh runs about $59.95 and holds that price almost everywhere because OOFOS enforces minimum advertised pricing, so there is no coupon to chase and a clearance color is the only honest way under $60. It carries the APMA Seal of Acceptance, and its OOfoam absorbs about 37% more impact than ordinary footwear foam, which is exactly what a dancer who pounds a hard floor all day wants the second class ends. Wear them to and from the studio and between numbers, never during class, and never as a fix for actual pain. If a high arch is your real problem, a dance-brand slide may fit better, and our recovery footwear review lays out the head-to-head.

## Do this now

- Decide what job you actually want the shoe to do. OOFOS are recovery footwear: you slip them on after class, after rehearsal, and between numbers at a competition so a tired arch and ankle can decompress. They are not a class shoe, not an arch-support orthotic, and not a treatment for an injury. If that off-the-floor comfort is the job, they are a strong pick.
- Start with the OOFOS OOahh, about $59.95 and right around $60 at REI or Fleet Feet. It carries the APMA Seal of Acceptance, the OOfoam absorbs about 37% more impact than ordinary footwear foam, it weighs about 9.9 ounces a pair, and it is machine washable, which matters when it lives in a sweaty dance bag. Try a size on at REI or Fleet Feet so the slide sits relaxed, not snug.
- If your dancer trains heavy and ends every week trashed, look at the OOahh PLUS, the same slide with a bit more foam under the foot. For a once-a-week recreational kid, the standard OOahh is plenty.
- Want something shaped for a dancer foot rather than a runner's? OOFOS is mainstream and easy to find, but the dance-brand slides (Gliss on a women's last with real arch support, Chacott in centimeter sizing) can fit a high arch better. We lay out the head-to-head in [the recovery footwear review](/reviews/recovery-footwear-for-dancers).
- Keep the frame honest. OOFOS help tired, achy feet feel better after work. If there is pain, swelling, or numbness, that is a podiatrist or dance-medicine question, not a slide.

## Mistakes to skip

- Don't wear them in class. A recovery slide is the opposite of a dance shoe: loose, cushioned, zero floor feel. They are for the walk to the car, not for technique.
- Don't expect them to fix an injury. The APMA seal is about promoting foot health and comfort, not treating a condition. OOFOS market recovery and comfort, not a cure, and so do we.
- Don't oversize them. They should feel relaxed but stay on the foot. A slide you have to grip with your toes defeats the purpose and is a trip risk on backstage stairs.
- Don't waste an afternoon hunting for a coupon on a current OOahh color. OOFOS holds minimum advertised pricing, so the standard slide is about $59.95 brand-direct and right around $60 at REI and Fleet Feet alike, with no code to find. The only honest way under $60 is a clearance or discontinued color (some drop to about $45 at Fleet Feet), and a price well above $60 means a limited-edition or collaboration color, not the standard slide.

## Related buying guides

- [Best Recovery Footwear For Dancers](/reviews/recovery-footwear-for-dancers)
- [Best Recovery And Conditioning Tools For Dancers](/reviews/recovery-and-conditioning-tools-for-dancers)

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