Nike Air Force 1 Mid fits the same as AF1 Low — true to size relative to most sneakers, and the same number as Air Jordan 1, Air Max 90, Vans Authentic, and SB Dunk Low. The leather upper and padded ankle collar hug the foot; the mid-top construction doesn't change the length fit compared to the Low. Based on 373 owner-reported pairs in the Feetlot database, the typical wearer takes the same number in AF1 Mid as in AF1 Low. If unsure: order true to size. Wide feet should size up half — the leather toe box doesn't widen with wear.
AF1 Mid Sizing — What 373 Pairs in the Feetlot Database Tell Us
The Nike Air Force 1 Mid '07 is the most-tracked mid-top basketball-derived sneaker in the Feetlot database. Across 373 owner-reported pairs, the residual variance is tight (standard deviation ≈ 0.24 size units), meaning sizing is consistent across the various AF1 Mid colorways (Triple White, Black, University Blue). Feetlot data confirms what Nike retailers report: AF1 Mid and AF1 Low sit in the same size bucket — same number between them, and same as Air Jordan 1, Air Max 90, and Vans Authentic.
The reason AF1 Mid fits the same as AF1 Low is that both use the same cup-sole tooling and upper last — the mid-top ankle collar is stitched above the last line without changing foot length. The padded leather collar at the ankle softens slightly with wear but doesn't affect the sizing. Going below true size pinches the toes against the leather toe cap regardless of the collar height.
Should You Size Up or Down in AF1 Mid?
Standard fit (most people)
Order true to size — your usual sneaker number, same as you'd buy in AF1 Low, AJ1, or AM90. The leather upper softens slightly at the throat over the first 10–15 wears but doesn't change length. True-to-size works whether you lace them tight or leave them loose.
Wide feet
Size up half. The leather toe box doesn't widen with wear. Width isn't offered separately on most AF1 Mid colorways. Half a size up adds forefoot room without making the collar feel loose around the ankle.
Narrow feet
True to size works for most narrow feet thanks to the padded leather lining. The structured heel counter anchors the back of the foot. Going half down occasionally works for very narrow feet but can make the collar press the ankle at the top edge.
AF1 Mid vs AF1 Low vs AF1 High
All three AF1 heights (Low, Mid, High) use the same last and the same length advice — true to size, same number across all three. The collar height changes the silhouette and day-one collar stiffness, not the fit at the toe or heel. If you wear AF1 Low in 10, take AF1 Mid in 10.
How AF1 Mid Compares to Other Sneakers
The Nike Air Force 1 Mid fits at the same numerical size as Nike Air Force 1 Low, Air Jordan 1 (High, Mid, Low), Air Jordan 3, Air Jordan 4, Air Jordan 5, Air Jordan 6, Air Jordan 11, Nike Air Max 1, Air Max 90, Nike Dunk Low, Nike Dunk High, SB Dunk Low, Nike Blazer Mid '77, Vans Authentic, Vans Old Skool, adidas Superstar, adidas Stan Smith, adidas Gazelle, adidas Samba OG, adidas NMD R1, New Balance 574, Sperry Authentic Original, and adidas YEEZY Boost 350 V2 — within a quarter size difference. According to Feetlot data, all of these round to the same size in 0.5 increments.
The shoes that run larger in number than AF1 Mid: adidas YEEZY Boost 350 V2, Nike Air Max 97, and Nike Air Max 95 run about half a size larger in number — if you wear AF1 Mid in 10, take 9.5 in those. Converse Chuck Taylor Ox and Clarks Desert Boot run about half a size smaller in number than AF1 Mid — if you wear AF1 Mid in 10, take 10.5 in those.
Boot-style models: Red Wing Iron Ranger runs about a full size smaller in number than AF1 Mid — if you wear AF1 Mid in 10, take Iron Ranger in 9.
Sign in to Feetlot and add a few of your other sneakers to get a personal AF1 Mid size recommendation calibrated to your actual foot.
Nike Air Force 1 Mid Size Chart (US / EU / UK)
| US Men's | US Women's | UK | EU |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7 | 8.5 | 6 | 40 |
| 7.5 | 9 | 6.5 | 40.5 |
| 8 | 9.5 | 7 | 41 |
| 8.5 | 10 | 7.5 | 42 |
| 9 | 10.5 | 8 | 42.5 |
| 9.5 | 11 | 8.5 | 43 |
| 10 | 11.5 | 9 | 44 |
| 10.5 | 12 | 9.5 | 44.5 |
| 11 | 12.5 | 10 | 45 |
| 11.5 | 13 | 10.5 | 45.5 |
| 12 | 13.5 | 11 | 46 |
| 13 | 14.5 | 12 | 47.5 |
Common Sizing Mistakes
- Sizing up because of the ankle collar. The collar adds visual height, not length. AF1 Mid and AF1 Low use the same last — same size in both.
- Buying AF1 Mid in your Air Jordan 1 High size. They're the same size — same number works across AJ1 High, AJ1 Mid, AJ1 Low, and AF1 Mid. No adjustment needed.
- Expecting the leather to break in width-wise. The leather toe box softens slightly over 15–20 wears, but the width doesn't change meaningfully. Go up half for wide feet; don't wait out a pinch.
- Assuming YEEZY 350 sizing carries over. YEEZY 350 V2 runs about half a size larger in number than AF1 Mid. If you wear YEEZY 350 in 10, take AF1 Mid in 9.5.
- Confusing AF1 Mid '07 with limited AF1 Mid collabs. Limited-edition AF1 Mid collabs (e.g., Supreme, Off-White) may use premium leathers or unique construction, but the last is the same — true-to-size advice applies to all of them.
How Feetlot Computes These Numbers
Every AF1 Mid 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 Low). When a Feetlot user provides their size in any tracked shoe, the model recovers their true foot baseline and recommends the matching AF1 Mid size.
This works better than the pairwise approach you'll see on most sneaker blogs because Feetlot uses the entire wardrobe graph. A YEEZY 350 owner contributes data about how YEEZY fits relative to AF1 owners (who often own both), which links back to AF1 Mid 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.