The adidas YEEZY Boost 700 fits at true Nike sneaker size for most people — about half a size larger in number than your Air Force 1, and the same number you wear in YEEZY 350 V2. Based on 404 owner-reported pairs in the Feetlot database, the typical wearer takes their everyday Nike size in the 700, not the half-down they take in AF1. If unsure: order true to size. Wide feet should size up half. Narrow feet stay true.
YEEZY 700 Sizing — What 404 Pairs in the Feetlot Database Tell Us
The adidas YEEZY Boost 700 is the most-tracked chunky YEEZY silhouette in the Feetlot database. Across 404 owner-reported pairs spanning the 700 V1, V2, and V3, the residual variance is tight (standard deviation ≈ 0.24 size units), meaning the recommendation holds across foot shapes and across the three sub-models. The typical wearer sits at their true Nike sneaker size — about half a size larger in number than they take in Air Force 1, and the same number they wear in YEEZY 350 V2.
The reason the 700 lands at true Nike size — rather than half down like AF1 — is the layered mesh-and-suede upper with a reinforced toe cap and structured throat. The 700 looks like a roomy "dad shoe" externally, but the inside last wraps the foot tightly and leaves no slack at the heel for sizing down. The full-length adiPRENE+ and Boost midsole adds underfoot cushion, not length. Going below true Nike size in the 700 pinches the metatarsals against the dense forefoot reinforcement.
Should You Size Up or Down in YEEZY 700?
Standard fit (most people)
Order true to size — your usual Nike sneaker size. According to Feetlot data, the typical YEEZY 700 wearer takes half a size above the number they wear in Air Force 1 or Vans, and the same number they wear in Air Max 90, Air Max 270, and YEEZY 350 V2. Don't carry over the half-down adjustment you use in AF1 — the 700's structured upper takes up that slack already.
Wide feet
Size up half. The 700's mesh forefoot has a layered overlay that doesn't relax with wear, and the suede toe cap on V1 and V2 is rigid. Half a size up is the standard wide-foot adjustment in the Feetlot database — it adds forefoot room without making the heel sloppy against the structured throat.
Narrow feet
True to size works for most narrow feet because the structured upper pulls itself close to the foot at the throat and laces. Going half down occasionally fits very narrow feet who like a locked-in feel, but the rigid toe cap means a too-small pair traps the foot at the front of the shoe.
YEEZY 700 V1, V2, and V3
The 700 V1 (Wave Runner and retro colorways), V2 (refined upper), and V3 (futuristic see-through cage, no Boost in the cage cutouts) all share the same last and fit at the same length — true to your Nike sneaker size in all three. The V3's open cage is marginally more accommodating across the toe box. The MNVN variant (woven monofilament upper) runs about a quarter size snugger in the forefoot than V1 — round up rather than down between sizes in the MNVN.
How YEEZY 700 Compares to Other Sneakers
The YEEZY 700 fits at the same numerical size as most modern Nike and adidas running silhouettes — Air Max 90, 95, 97, 270, Air Jordan 1, Air Jordan 4, Blazer Mid '77, SB Dunk Low, Nike Dunk Low, and YEEZY Boost 350 V2 all round to the same size in 0.5 increments. Same number you wear in YEEZY 700. The 350 V2 match is particularly clean — the two silhouettes look completely different but Feetlot data shows their sizing aligns within a quarter size.
The shoes that run larger in number than YEEZY 700: Nike Air Force 1, Vans Authentic, Chuck Taylor Ox, adidas Superstar, and Sperry Authentic all run about half a size larger than the 700 — so if you wear YEEZY 700 in 10, you'd take 9.5 in those. Boots go the other way: Red Wing Iron Ranger and Clarks Desert Boot both run about a full size larger than the 700 — take a full size down from your 700 number in those.
Sign in to Feetlot and add a few of your other sneakers to get a personal YEEZY 700 size recommendation calibrated to your actual foot.
adidas YEEZY Boost 700 Size Chart (US / EU / UK)
| US Men's | US Women's | UK | EU |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7 | 8 | 6.5 | 40 |
| 7.5 | 8.5 | 7 | 40.5 |
| 8 | 9 | 7.5 | 41.5 |
| 8.5 | 9.5 | 8 | 42 |
| 9 | 10 | 8.5 | 42.5 |
| 9.5 | 10.5 | 9 | 43.5 |
| 10 | 11 | 9.5 | 44 |
| 10.5 | 11.5 | 10 | 44.5 |
| 11 | 12 | 10.5 | 45.5 |
| 11.5 | 12.5 | 11 | 46 |
| 12 | 13 | 11.5 | 46.5 |
| 13 | 14 | 12.5 | 48 |
Common Sizing Mistakes
- Buying YEEZY 700 in your AF1 size. AF1 runs about half a size larger in number than YEEZY 700. If your AF1 fits half down from true Nike, your 700 should be true to your Nike size — not also half down. This is the single most common return reason on the 700.
- Sizing down because the shoe "looks bulky". The 700's silhouette is exaggerated externally, but the inside last is normal-volume. Sizing down to fight the dad-shoe look pinches the toes against the reinforced toe cap.
- Assuming V1, V2, and V3 fit differently. They share the same last. According to Feetlot data, owners report the same numerical size works across V1, V2, and V3.
- Treating the MNVN like the standard 700. The MNVN's woven monofilament upper doesn't drape like the V1/V2 mesh — it runs about a quarter size snugger in the forefoot. Round up between sizes in the MNVN.
- Going up a full size on first wear. The structured mesh softens slightly after a few hours. Half a size up is the right call for wide feet; a full size up gives the heel too much slop.
How Feetlot Computes These Numbers
Every YEEZY 700 sizing recommendation on Feetlot is the output of a global offset model fit to over 100,000 owner-reported shoe records. Each shoe gets a single number — its "size offset" — that captures how its sizing drifts relative to a reference shoe (the Nike Air Force 1). When a Feetlot user provides their size in any tracked shoe, the model recovers their true foot baseline and recommends the matching YEEZY 700 size.
This works better than the pairwise approach you'll see on most sizing blogs because Feetlot uses the entire wardrobe graph. A YEEZY 350 V2 owner contributes data about how YEEZY fits relative to Air Force 1 owners (who often own both), which links back to YEEZY 700 owners through any shared model. Even when two users share zero shoes directly, the chain of users in between transmits a consistent recommendation. The result: sizing advice that holds up no matter how unusual a wardrobe is.