Medically reviewed by Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM
Board-certified podiatric surgeon | Balance Foot & Ankle, Howell & Bloomfield Hills, MI
Last reviewed: May 2026
Plantar warts near Fenton look like calluses — but there’s one quick test that separates them instantly, and getting the diagnosis wrong means months of failed treatment. More importantly, there are three different in-office removal methods, and the one your podiatrist chooses depends on a factor most patients never think to ask about. Call (810) 206-1402 — same-day plantar wart removal available in Fenton.

Medically Reviewed by: Dr. Tom Biernacki DPM · Board-Certified Podiatrist · Balance Foot & Ankle PLLC · Updated 2026
Plantar Wart Removal Near Fenton, MI
Plantar wart removal near Fenton, MI is available at Balance Foot & Ankle in Howell. Dr. Biernacki DPM confirms the diagnosis — distinguishing verruca from corns and calluses — and removes plantar warts using cantharidin, serial salicylic acid debridement, or Swift microwave immunotherapy for treatment-resistant cases. Call (810) 206-1402.
Is It Really a Wart? The Diagnostic Difference That Changes Treatment
The single most important step in plantar wart treatment is confirming the diagnosis — because plantar warts, corns, and calluses look nearly identical and require completely different treatments. The definitive clinical sign of a plantar wart: pinch test pain. Warts hurt when squeezed from the sides; corns hurt when pressed directly. The second diagnostic sign: disrupted skin lines — normal skin lines flow around a wart but continue through a corn or callus. The third sign: black dots visible after paring the surface — thrombosed capillaries, pathognomonic of verruca. Plantar warts are caused by human papillomavirus (HPV) — types 1, 2, 4, and 27 — infecting superficial keratinocytes via contact on wet surfaces. In our Fenton-area clinic, mosaic warts (clusters of confluent verrucae on the plantar surface) are the most challenging to treat and the pattern most commonly under-treated at home.
Key Takeaway: Warts = pain on pinch + disrupted skin lines + black dots. Corns = pain on direct pressure, normal skin lines. Children’s warts: 65% resolve within 2 years, but spreading or painful warts warrant treatment. Mosaic warts: professional treatment required — they expand rather than self-resolve. Diabetic patients: never self-treat foot lesions with caustic chemicals.
Treatment Options for Plantar Warts
Cantharidin (blister beetle extract): Applied in-office, painless at application. Creates a blister under the wart that lifts it from the skin. Highly effective, especially in children. Retreatment at 2–3 week intervals if needed. Serial salicylic acid debridement: In-office debridement of overlying callus combined with high-concentration salicylic acid. Weekly visits for 4–8 weeks. Best for flat spreading mosaic warts. Swift microwave immunotherapy: 3–5 second microwave pulses stimulate systemic immune recognition of HPV. 3-session protocol monthly. Highly effective for chronic resistant and mosaic warts. Liquid nitrogen cryotherapy: Less effective than cantharidin for plantar warts due to thick overlying callus limiting freeze depth. Surgical excision: Reserved for single isolated warts unresponsive to conservative treatment. What doesn’t work: Duct tape (no evidence in quality trials) and OTC salicylic acid without professional debridement (insufficient penetration into plantar callus).
⚠️ See a Podiatrist If:
- Lesion not responding after 3 months of OTC treatment — may be a corn, callus, or skin lesion needing diagnosis
- Multiple spreading warts (mosaic pattern) — home treatment ineffective, prevents expansion
- Plantar lesion in a diabetic — never self-treat with sharp instruments or caustic chemicals
- Wart causing pain or gait change — functional impairment warrants professional removal
- Any lesion with irregular borders, bleeding, or rapid growth — rule out amelanotic melanoma
Plantar Wart Home Treatment Products
For small, non-painful plantar warts, these OTC treatments may resolve the lesion before an office visit is necessary:

PowerStep Pinnacle’s Plantar Wart Remover (40% Salicylic Acid)
Salicylic acid at 40% concentration gradually dissolves the wart tissue layer by layer over 4–6 weeks. This is the highest strength available OTC and is the same active ingredient we use in-office for mild warts. Apply to dry skin, cover with the included pad, and repeat every 48 hours. Do not use if diabetic or if there is any loss of foot sensation.

PowerStep Pinnacle’s Moleskin Padding — Wart Offloading
Plantar warts on weight-bearing surfaces are painful because direct pressure is applied to the lesion with every step. Donut-shaped foam padding placed around (not on top of) the wart transfers weight to the surrounding skin, dramatically reducing pain during treatment. Patients who use offloading pads during salicylic acid treatment tolerate the process much better and are more likely to complete the full course.
American Academy of Dermatology: Warts
Getting to Our Office From Fenton
Our Howell office at 4330 E Grand River Ave, Howell, MI 48843 is about 15 minutes from Fenton via US-23 N. We accept most major insurance. Call (810) 206-1402 or book online.
Plantar Wart Won’t Go Away? Get Professional Removal
Balance Foot & Ankle · Serving Fenton & Michigan
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📋 Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM, FACFAS answers:
Plantar warts near Fenton are caused by the human papillomavirus (HPV) and can be stubborn to eliminate without professional treatment. Our podiatrist serving Fenton offers multiple effective treatments depending on the size, location, and number of warts. Topical salicylic acid therapy applied under occlusion is a first-line option. Cryotherapy with liquid nitrogen freezes the wart tissue and stimulates an immune response to clear the virus. For resistant or multiple warts, swift microwave therapy is a highly effective newer option. In-office surgical excision or laser treatment can also be performed for persistent lesions. Most patients near Fenton achieve complete resolution within a series of two to four treatments. We also provide guidance on preventing reinfection and spread to other areas of the foot.
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.