Medically reviewed by Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM
Board-certified podiatric surgeon | Balance Foot & Ankle, Howell & Bloomfield Hills, MI
Last reviewed: May 2026
Balance Foot & Ankle offers same-day appointments for urgent foot and ankle conditions across Southeast Michigan — but the most important factor in outcomes isn’t getting seen quickly. Our podiatrists explain what to do in the first 24-48 hours before your appointment that most patients skip entirely. Call (810) 206-1402 — expert podiatric care across Michigan.

For a foot doctor near Farmington Hills, 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 Farmington Hills, 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
The most important clinical decision with Farmington Hills Michigan Foot Doctor isn’t which treatment to start with — it’s identifying the correct subtype. That changes everything. Call (810) 206-1402.
Related Conditions
In This Article

Podiatric Care Convenient to Farmington Hills
Farmington Hills residents have easy access to Balance Foot & Ankle’s Bloomfield Hills office — approximately 10–12 minutes east via Twelve Mile Road or 15 minutes via I-696. This Oakland County community of 80,000+ residents deserves specialist podiatric care that doesn’t require long drives, and Dr. Tom Biernacki’s practice delivers it with same-week scheduling and comprehensive diagnostic and treatment capabilities.
Farmington Hills’ Foot Health Population
Farmington Hills combines an active professional and family population with significant senior residential communities. The area’s competitive youth sports programs — football, soccer, basketball, and lacrosse at Harrison, Farmington, and North Farmington High Schools — generate consistent athletic foot and ankle injury presentations. The area’s running community uses Heritage Park’s trail network and the Shiawassee Park trail system, producing the plantar fasciitis and ankle injury presentations typical of Michigan’s active recreational population.
Farmington Hills’ substantial senior population — in the city’s numerous assisted living and independent living communities — presents with the progressive structural problems of aging: bunions and hammertoes worsening with decades of shoe use, nail fungus affecting quality of life, and diabetic foot complications requiring careful preventive management.
Specialist Care for Farmington Hills Patients
Balance Foot & Ankle provides Farmington Hills patients with on-site digital X-ray and ultrasound, custom orthotic fabrication, laser nail fungus treatment, ultrasound-guided injection therapy, shockwave therapy, diabetic foot examinations, and surgical consultation. The practice accepts all major Michigan insurance plans including Blue Cross, Aetna, Cigna, Medicare, and Medicaid.
Dr. Tom's Product Recommendations

ASICS Gel-Kayano 30 Stability Shoes
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Moderate-severe overpronation, plantar fasciitis, stability running
Not for neutral or underpronating runners
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✅ Pros / Benefits
- Bloomfield Hills office accessible from Farmington Hills in 10-12 minutes
- Sports podiatry for Farmington Hills’ competitive youth and adult athletic community
- Comprehensive geriatric foot care for the area’s senior residential communities
- Same-week appointments with board-certified podiatrist
❌ Cons / Risks
- Not located in Farmington Hills — short drive to Bloomfield Hills required
Dr. Tom Biernacki’s Recommendation
Farmington Hills is a great community with a mix of high-level athletes and active seniors — both populations that need podiatric care and respond well to it. Whether it’s a Harrison High School soccer player with an ankle sprain or a Heritage Park trail runner with plantar fasciitis, we work to get them back to full activity quickly.
— Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM | Board-Certified Podiatric Surgeon | Balance Foot & Ankle
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there a podiatrist near Farmington Hills MI?
Balance Foot & Ankle’s Bloomfield Hills office is approximately 10–12 minutes east of Farmington Hills via Twelve Mile Road. We accept all major insurance plans and offer same-week appointments for new patients. Call (248) 477-4619.
What is the best treatment for bunions without surgery?
The most effective non-surgical bunion management combines: wide-toe-box footwear that eliminates compressive forces on the bunion joint, custom orthotics to control the overpronation that accelerates bunion progression, toe spacers to maintain hallux alignment, and corticosteroid injection for acute synovitis pain. These measures manage symptoms and slow progression without correcting the underlying bony deformity.
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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 issues, 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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📋 Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM, FACFAS answers:
No referral is needed to see our podiatrist near Farmington Hills. You can call or book online directly. Most major insurance plans are accepted, including Blue Cross, Medicare, Aetna, Priority Health, and United Healthcare. We treat the full range of foot and ankle conditions including plantar fasciitis, bunions, ingrown toenails, diabetic foot care, neuropathy, and sports injuries. Our board-certified DPM provides both conservative and surgical care. Same-week and urgent appointments are available for residents of the Farmington Hills area.
Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM is a board-certified foot & ankle surgeon (ABFAS & ABPM) at Balance Foot & Ankle Specialists in Southeast Michigan. With over a decade of clinical experience, he specializes in heel pain, bunions, diabetic foot care, sports injuries, and minimally invasive surgery. Dr. Biernacki is a member of the APMA and ACFAS, and his patient education content on MichiganFootDoctors.com and YouTube has made him one of the most-followed foot & ankle educators on YouTube.
