What we know about sole thickness and soundness
When we think about hooves, we often focus on wall cracks, flares, or the perfect white line, but the sole plays a vital and often underappreciated role in keeping our horses sound, especially in the age of synthetic surfaces and intense sport schedules.
The thickness and integrity of the sole significantly impact how well the hoof can absorb concussion, resist bruising, and support biomechanical loads; yet, many horses in performance work have soles that are dangerously thin.
Here we dive into the structure and function of the equine sole, examining why sole depth matters, and what the current science and farriery best practices say about keeping this crucial layer robust.
What is the sole and what does it do?
The sole is the concave, keratinised structure covering the underside of the hoof, excluding the frog. It provides shock absorption, protects sensitive inner structures, and supports the coffin bone (P3). Although it isn’t designed to bear full weight in the same way as the hoof wall, it still takes on load during movement, especially when the horse lands flat or when the surface is uneven or hard.
A healthy sole is not just a surface coating; it’s a protective barrier that forms in layers over time. Sole depth typically ranges from 10–15 mm in a sound horse. When thickness drops below eight millimetres, studies show a significantly increased risk of bruising, abscesses, and solar penetration injuries.
The thin sole problem
Many sporthorses, especially in disciplines like showjumping and dressage, are shod and stabled on surfaces that do not challenge the hoof to develop thicker soles naturally. Factors contributing to sole thinning include:
- Over-trimming by well-meaning but aggressive farriery.
- Lack of stimulation due to limited turnout on varied terrain.
- Prolonged shoeing without sole contact.
- Excess moisture from constant washing or wet bedding.
- Concussive work on hard or artificial surfaces.
Horses with long toes and low heels are particularly at risk, as this conformation can shift weight-bearing further onto the sole, overstressing already thin areas.
Soles and surfaces
The arena surface your horse works on can have a dramatic impact on sole health. Hard or shallow surfaces increase concussive force, particularly in the forelimbs. Thin soles lack the natural cushioning to protect the underlying corium from this shock, increasing the likelihood of stone bruises, soreness, or chronic hoof sensitivity.
In contrast, overly deep or loose footing can contribute to toe dragging, leverage stress, and long toe/low heel conformation, all of which can alter loading patterns on the sole and reduce effective sole growth.
It’s essential to match your farriery strategy to your footing. For example, a horse working primarily on hard tracks may need extra sole support or a protective pad system, while a horse in deep arenas may require a trim that balances breakover and encourages heel engagement.
The biomechanics of load and protection
The hoof capsule is designed to dissipate force; the walls expand, the frog and digital cushion compress, and the sole flexes slightly to spread impact. But this mechanism depends on adequate sole depth and structure.
When the sole is too thin:
- The coffin bone (P3) sits closer to the ground.
- The horse is more likely to land toe-first to avoid heel pressure, which disrupts the natural breakover.
- The soft tissues of the foot become more vulnerable to bruising and inflammation.
- The risk of navicular strain, laminar stress, and solar abscesses increases.
This can result in subtle, recurring lameness that evades detection on imaging but resolves with protective shoeing or rest, suggesting that sole pain is the underlying cause.
Farriery solutions
Modern farriers are increasingly aware of the need to protect and preserve sole thickness, especially in performance horses. Best practices include:
- Minimal sole paring: Avoid aggressive trimming of exfoliating sole unless there is retained sole creating distortion or allowing infection to fester.
- Shorter shoeing cycles: Allowing the foot to overgrow between trims increases sole stress and leverage.
- Shoes with protective features, like rim pads, full pads with packing, or clogs for horses with sole trauma.
- Encouraging barefoot periods where possible (such as in off-seasons) to allow natural stimulation and sole thickening.
- Balancing the trim to promote even loading and natural breakover, particularly crucial for reducing leverage strain on the toe.
Some farriers use hoof testers to monitor sole sensitivity regularly, helping catch sole thinning before it becomes a full-blown lameness case.
Can a horse regain sole thickness?
Yes, but it takes time, management, and patience.
Healthy sole growth requires:
- Consistent stimulation through movement on varied terrain (hard-packed paddocks, gravel paths).
- Low sugar/starch diet to reduce systemic inflammation that can affect hoof horn quality.
- Adequate zinc, copper, and biotin levels.
- Dry conditions as hooves that stay too wet soften and wear faster.
- A well-balanced trim cycle that avoids over-thinning.
It may take four to six months or more to see meaningful increases in sole depth, particularly in older horses or those with chronically compromised feet.
Did you know?
A 2015 study published in the Journal of Equine Veterinary Science found that horses with thin soles (less than eight millimetres) were three times more likely to present with foot pain or lameness during seasonal changes than those with normal thickness.
Checklist for supporting sole depth
- Monitor sole depth with your farrier regularly, especially if your horse is footy.
- Avoid over-trimming any exfoliating sole.
- Provide turnout on firm, dry, varied terrain.
- Avoid oversoft footing or long spells in wet bedding.
- Match shoeing strategies to your surface and workload.
- Review the diet for adequate trace mineral levels, particularly zinc and copper.
Conclusion
Sole thickness isn’t something you see at first glance, but it may be one of the most critical markers of hoof resilience and long-term soundness. Whether your horse is jumping on grass, schooling on fibre arenas, or hacking on tar, their soles take the hit, or soften the blow.
By recognising the signs of sole stress early, working with your farrier to protect depth, and adjusting your management to support natural hoof function, you can make soundness start from the ground up.
