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Bingham Farms Michigan Foot Doctor — Foot & Ankle Care

Medically reviewed by Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM

Board-certified podiatric surgeon | Balance Foot & Ankle, Howell & Bloomfield Hills, MI
Last reviewed: May 2026

MICHIGAN PODIATRIST INSIGHT

The most important clinical decision with Bingham Farms Michigan Foot Doctor — Foot & Ankle Care isn’t which treatment to choose — it’s identifying which subtype you have first. Our podiatrists see patients treated for the wrong subtype for months before the correct diagnosis leads to full resolution. Call (810) 206-1402 — expert podiatric care across Michigan.

Bingham Farms Foot Doctor - Michigan podiatrist, Balance Foot & Ankle
Bingham Farms Foot Doctor treatment | Balance Foot & Ankle, Michigan

For a foot doctor near Bingham Farms, MI — Balance Foot & Ankle’s Bloomfield Hills location accepts most major insurance plans and offers same-day appointments.

You’re in the right place. Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM, FACFAS — board-certified foot & ankle surgeon with 3,000+ surgeries — explains exactly what a foot doctor near Bingham Farms, MI means and what works. Call (810) 206-1402 for same-day appointment at Howell or Bloomfield Hills.

Medically Reviewed  |  Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM  |  Board-Certified Podiatric Surgeon  |  Balance Foot & Ankle, Michigan

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8opvH3qxkW4
Dr. Biernacki provides foot and ankle care for Bingham Farms Michigan — just minutes away in Bloomfield Hills
Bingham Farms Michigan foot doctor Oakland County Balance Foot Ankle Bloomfield Hills podiatrist
MICHIGAN PODIATRIST INSIGHT

The most important clinical decision with Bingham Farms Foot Doctor isn’t which treatment to start with — it’s identifying the correct subtype. That changes everything. Call (810) 206-1402.

Foot Doctor for Bingham Farms — Expert Local Care

Bingham Farms is a small, prestigious Oakland County village — a professional community with a concentration of corporate offices and high-end residences along the Lahser Road corridor between Franklin and Beverly Hills. When Bingham Farms residents and the local professional community need specialist foot and ankle care, Board-Certified podiatrist Dr. Tom Biernacki at Balance Foot & Ankle’s Bloomfield Hills office is approximately 5–7 miles southeast — a very short drive for expert podiatric care.

Professional Community and Active Residents

Bingham Farms’ professional community — including executives and employees at the Northwestern Highway corporate corridor — generates consistent occupational foot care demand. Professionals spending long hours in dress shoes, commuting, and standing develop plantar fasciitis, metatarsalgia, and bunion-related footwear difficulties that benefit from podiatric evaluation and efficient management. Bingham Farms residents active in running, cycling, and tennis develop sports-related foot and ankle injuries that require sports podiatric expertise.

Adult Bingham Farms residents managing bunions, ingrown toenails, hammertoes, custom orthotics, and diabetic foot concerns receive comprehensive evaluation at our nearby Bloomfield Hills office. Same-week appointments and efficient, respect-for-time scheduling are characteristic of our care model — appropriate for Bingham Farms’ demanding professional community.

Getting from Bingham Farms to Balance Foot & Ankle

From Bingham Farms, take Lahser Road south to our Bloomfield Hills office — approximately 8–10 minutes. We accept Blue Cross Blue Shield, Aetna, Priority Health, Cigna, United Healthcare, Medicare, and most major insurance plans. Call (810) 588-0985 or schedule online at michiganfootdoctors.com.

Dr. Tom's Product Recommendations

Allen Edmonds Men's Dress Oxford (Quality Dress Shoe)

Allen Edmonds Men’s Dress Oxford (Quality Dress Shoe)

⭐ Highly Rated

Quality leather dress shoe with proper last width and construction — recommended for Bingham Farms professional community patients developing metatarsalgia and bunion pain from narrow, low-quality dress shoes at corporate environments.

Dr. Tom says: “My podiatrist told me my cheap dress shoes were causing my metatarsalgia — switching to quality wider-lasted dress shoes made an immediate difference.”

✅ Best for
Professional dress shoe metatarsalgia, bunion accommodation, occupational foot pain
⚠️ Not ideal for
Athletic or outdoor footwear needs — dress shoe for professional business context
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Disclosure: We earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

Powerstep Pinnacle Plus Orthotic Insole

Powerstep Pinnacle Plus Orthotic Insole

⭐ Highly Rated

Semi-rigid orthotic with motion control and metatarsal support — provides professional-grade arch and forefoot support for Bingham Farms occupational patients managing plantar fasciitis and metatarsalgia from extended standing and walking.

Dr. Tom says: “My foot doctor recommended the Powerstep Plus for my work heel pain — it provided the support I needed through long office and meeting days.”

✅ Best for
Occupational plantar fasciitis, metatarsalgia, dress shoe orthotic, professional use
⚠️ Not ideal for
Custom orthotic prescription for specific structural biomechanical pathology
View on Amazon →

Disclosure: We earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

✅ Pros / Benefits

  • 5–7 miles from Bingham Farms via Lahser Road — very convenient access to Board-Certified specialist
  • Efficient scheduling and respect for time appropriate for Bingham Farms professional community
  • Comprehensive foot care including occupational foot conditions and custom orthotics
  • Same-week appointments for most Bingham Farms patients

❌ Cons / Risks

  • 8–10 minute drive from Bingham Farms to Bloomfield Hills office
  • Very small village community with no podiatrist on-site
Dr

Dr. Tom Biernacki’s Recommendation

Bingham Farms is a neighbor — the professional community there has easy access to our Bloomfield Hills office, and we see Bingham Farms patients regularly. Professional foot care for the Northwestern Highway corporate community is meaningful work: when a professional has plantar fasciitis that’s making their already long days harder, getting that resolved efficiently matters. We’re built for that — good care, good outcomes, respect for the patient’s schedule.

— Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM | Board-Certified Podiatric Surgeon | Balance Foot & Ankle

Frequently Asked Questions

Who is the foot doctor for Bingham Farms, Michigan?

Dr. Tom Biernacki at Balance Foot & Ankle in Bloomfield Hills is the foot doctor for Bingham Farms — approximately 5–7 miles southeast via Lahser Road. Call (810) 588-0985 or visit michiganfootdoctors.com to schedule.

What foot conditions are common in professional Bingham Farms patients?

Plantar fasciitis from extended standing and walking in dress shoes, metatarsalgia from narrow professional footwear, bunion-related shoe fitting difficulties, and custom orthotics for dress shoe use are among the most common presentations from the Bingham Farms professional community.

What insurance does the Bingham Farms foot doctor accept?

We accept most major insurance plans including Blue Cross Blue Shield, Aetna, Priority Health, Cigna, United Healthcare, and Medicare. Call (810) 588-0985 to verify your specific plan.

How quickly can Bingham Farms patients get an appointment?

New patients from Bingham Farms are typically seen within 5–7 business days. Urgent cases are accommodated within 24–48 hours. Call (810) 588-0985 or schedule online at michiganfootdoctors.com.

Michigan Foot Pain? See Dr. Biernacki In Person

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Same-week appointments · Howell & Bloomfield Hills

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Frequently Asked Questions

When should I see a podiatrist?

If symptoms persist past 2 weeks, affect your normal activity, or are accompanied by red-flag symptoms (warmth, redness, swelling, inability to bear weight).

What does treatment cost?

Most diagnostic visits and conservative treatments are covered by Medicare and major insurers. Out-of-pocket costs vary by your specific plan.

How quickly can I get an appointment?

Most non-urgent cases see us within 5 business days. Urgent cases (sudden pain, possible fracture) typically same or next business day.

In-Office Treatment at Balance Foot & Ankle

If home treatment isn’t providing relief for your foot and ankle condition, our podiatry team at Balance Foot & Ankle can help with same-day evaluations and advanced in-office care.

Frequently Asked Questions

When should I see a podiatrist?

See a podiatrist if: foot or ankle pain has lasted more than 2–4 weeks without improvement, you’re changing your gait to avoid pain, you have an open wound or sore that isn’t healing, you notice nail discoloration or thickening, you have diabetes and any foot concern, or pain is severe enough to wake you at night. Most foot conditions are easier and cheaper to treat early — what starts as a minor issue can become a surgical problem with months of delay.

What is the difference between a podiatrist and an orthopedic surgeon?

Podiatrists (DPM — Doctor of Podiatric Medicine) specialize exclusively in the foot, ankle, and lower leg. Orthopedic surgeons (MD/DO) have broader musculoskeletal training but variable foot/ankle subspecialization. For foot and ankle-specific problems, a podiatrist often has more focused training and experience. For injuries involving the leg above the ankle, complex pediatric cases, or multi-level reconstruction, orthopedic consultation may be appropriate. We frequently co-manage patients with orthopedic colleagues.

How do I know if my foot pain is serious?

Signs that warrant same-day or next-day evaluation: severe pain that appeared suddenly without clear cause, swelling, redness, and warmth that appeared suddenly (possible gout, infection, or Charcot fracture), an open wound that looks infected (redness spreading, pus, warmth), inability to bear weight, or any foot problem in a diabetic patient. Pain that’s been present for weeks and is stable is important but not an emergency — schedule within 1–2 weeks.

Can foot problems cause back and knee pain?

Yes — this is a kinetic chain effect. Abnormal foot mechanics (overpronation, supination, leg length discrepancy) cause compensatory changes in knee, hip, and lumbar alignment. Roughly 30% of patients presenting to our clinic with knee pain have a treatable foot-level biomechanical cause. Correcting foot mechanics with orthotics or appropriate footwear often provides significant knee and back relief. If you have chronic knee or back pain and haven’t had your foot mechanics evaluated, it’s worth a consult.

Are orthotics worth it?

For the right conditions, yes — custom orthotics are among the most cost-effective interventions in podiatry. They’re most effective for: plantar fasciitis, flat feet with secondary knee/back pain, leg length discrepancy, metatarsalgia, posterior tibial tendon dysfunction, and diabetic foot pressure management. Quality OTC orthotics ($35–60) resolve symptoms for 60% of patients with mild-to-moderate conditions. Custom orthotics are appropriate when OTC options have failed or when the biomechanical problem is complex. We cast custom orthotics in-office.

How do I choose the right running shoes?

Start with your foot type (flat, neutral, high arch) and running pattern (overpronator, neutral, supinator). Flat feet and overpronators do best in stability or motion-control shoes. Neutral feet do well in neutral-cushioned shoes. High arches need maximum cushioning with flexible soles. Always buy running shoes at the end of the day (foot swelling peaks then), get properly fitted by a specialist, and replace every 300–500 miles. If you’ve been injured repeatedly, a gait analysis can identify the mechanical flaw driving your injury pattern.

What is the difference between a sprain and a fracture?

A sprain is a ligament injury (the tissue connecting bones); a fracture is a break in the bone itself. Both can occur with the same trauma (ankle roll, fall). The old test — ‘if you can walk, it’s not broken’ — is wrong; many fractures are initially weight-bearable. Key differences: a fracture typically produces localized bone tenderness along the bone itself, while a sprain is tender over the ligament. X-ray is the standard to differentiate. High-grade sprains without proper treatment can be as disabling as fractures.

How do I prevent foot and ankle injuries?

The four most impactful prevention strategies: (1) Supportive, appropriately fitted footwear for your foot type and activity. (2) Gradual activity progression — the 10% rule (never increase weekly mileage or intensity by more than 10%). (3) Regular calf and ankle mobility work. (4) Strengthening the posterior tibial tendon, peroneals, and intrinsic foot muscles. Most overuse injuries are preventable; most acute injuries are not — but ankle sprain recurrence (60–70% without rehab) is prevented by balance and proprioception training.

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Balance Foot & Ankle surgeons are affiliated with Trinity Health Michigan, Corewell Health, and Henry Ford Health — three of Michigan’s largest health systems.