Reebok Club C 85 does not run small in length, but it can feel snug at first — especially for wide feet.
Most people should go true to size, while wide-foot wearers may consider sizing up by half.
From my experience working with sportswear manufacturing, footwear fit standards, and consumer wear testing, the “runs small” confusion usually comes from width and leather stiffness, not actual shoe length.
The Club C 85 is based on a classic 1980s tennis shoe last, which means:
Official brand reference:
👉 Reebok
This older-style construction feels different from modern sneakers with stretchy uppers or thick foam — which is why first impressions can feel tight.
In length:
✔ True to size
In width:
⚠ Slightly narrow, especially in the forefoot
Most complaints about “running small” come from:
Once broken in, the fit becomes more forgiving — but the width never becomes wide.
| Fit Area | Club C 85 Experience |
|---|---|
| Length | True to size |
| Width | Slightly narrow |
| Toe box | Tapered, not roomy |
| Break-in | Short (leather softens) |
| Heel fit | Secure |
| Arch feel | Neutral |
My observation:
People with average or narrow feet rarely have sizing issues.
Wide-foot wearers are the ones who feel “squeezed.”
| Sneaker | Fit Compared to C85 |
|---|---|
| Reebok Club C 85 | Baseline |
| Nike Air Force 1 | Wider, longer feel |
| Adidas Stan Smith | Similar length, slightly wider |
| New Balance 574 | More room overall |
Key takeaway:
If you’re used to roomier sneakers, the C85 may feel smaller — even if it isn’t.
Straight answer:
Reebok C85 doesn’t run small — it just isn’t wide-foot friendly.
Q1: Do Reebok Club C 85 run small compared to Nike?
They feel narrower than Nike, but the length is similar.
Q2: Will Club C 85 stretch over time?
Yes, slightly. The leather softens, but the overall shape stays narrow.
Q3: Are Club C 85 good for wide feet?
Not ideal. Sizing up can help, but they’re not designed as wide shoes.
Q4: Should I size down in Club C 85?
No. Sizing down usually makes the toe box too tight.
The Club C 85 shows an important lesson:
Most sizing complaints come from shape — not size numbers.
At 👉 fukigymwear,
we help brands design footwear-adjacent activewear and apparel with clearer fit logic — so customers don’t have to guess.
When sizing is honest, trust lasts longer than trends.