Mountain View, Los Gatos & San Jose Podiatrist Guide:
When to See a Foot Specialist vs. Your PCP
Not every foot or ankle problem needs a specialist — but plenty do, and waiting too long on the wrong ones can cost you time, pain, and sometimes more. Here’s how to know which is which.
One of the most common questions I hear from patients in San Jose, Los Gatos, and Mountain View isn’t about a specific diagnosis — it’s “should I have come here first, or seen my primary care doctor?” Both kinds of visits matter, but they’re built for different things. A primary care physician (PCP) is excellent at managing your overall health and catching problems early. A podiatrist has years of additional training focused entirely on the foot and ankle, with in-office tools, imaging, and procedures most PCP offices simply don’t have. This guide walks through exactly when each is the right call.
What a Podiatrist Actually Is
A podiatrist (DPM, Doctor of Podiatric Medicine) completes four years of podiatric medical school followed by a three-year surgical residency, with training focused entirely on the foot, ankle, and related lower-leg structures. Board certification — like the ABPM credential — reflects additional examination and ongoing requirements beyond basic licensure. This specialization means a podiatrist sees the same categories of conditions repeatedly and has in-office equipment, from X-rays to minor procedure tools, built specifically around the foot and ankle.
A primary care physician, by contrast, is trained broadly across the entire body — an enormous and valuable scope, but one that leaves less room for the kind of focused, repetition-based expertise a podiatrist develops in a single anatomical region.
What Your PCP Handles Well
Your primary care doctor remains the right first call for plenty of situations, including ones that happen to involve your feet:
A minor cut or scrape with no signs of infection · a mild, short-lived ankle sprain with no deformity · general screening as part of an annual physical · symptoms that could reflect a body-wide condition (like sudden swelling in both legs) rather than a localized foot problem · situations where you’re unsure which specialist you need at all.
If you’re not sure whether something needs specialist attention, your PCP can help triage and refer you appropriately — that coordination is part of what primary care does well.
When You Need a Podiatrist Instead
Certain situations are better served by going straight to a podiatrist, either because the problem is structural, recurring, or because diagnosis benefits from specialized in-office tools:
Podiatrist vs. PCP: Side-by-Side
| Factor | Primary Care Physician | Podiatrist |
|---|---|---|
| Scope of training | Whole-body, broad and general | Foot, ankle & lower leg, highly specialized |
| In-office foot X-rays | Usually not available | Typically available same-visit |
| Nail & minor skin procedures | Limited | Routine in-office capability |
| Diabetic foot exams | General screening | Detailed, foot-specific risk assessment |
| Surgical foot/ankle procedures | Refers out | Performed directly |
| Best for | Overall health, general screening, triage | Structural, recurring, or foot-specific problems |
The most effective care often involves both: a PCP who manages your overall health and a podiatrist your PCP can refer you to (or you can see directly) for anything foot-specific. Neither replaces the other.
Condition-by-Condition Guide
Plantar fasciitis / heel pain — podiatrist, especially if it persists beyond two weeks of home care.
Ingrown toenail — podiatrist, particularly if infected, recurring, or in a diabetic patient.
Bunions or hammertoes — podiatrist for evaluation, even if surgery isn’t needed yet.
Mild athlete’s foot — PCP is often fine for a first round of over-the-counter-strength treatment.
Ankle sprain, mild — PCP or urgent care is reasonable if there’s no deformity and you can bear weight.
Ankle sprain, severe or recurring — podiatrist, to rule out fracture or chronic instability.
Diabetic foot wound or ulcer — podiatrist promptly; this should never wait.
Toenail fungus — podiatrist for accurate diagnosis, since several conditions can look similar.
Why Diabetic Patients Need Routine Podiatric Care
Diabetes Changes the Math
Diabetes can reduce both sensation and blood flow to the feet, which means a small cut, blister, or callus that would be a non-issue for most people can progress unnoticed into a serious infection or ulcer. Routine podiatric foot exams are specifically designed to catch these problems early — checking circulation, sensation, skin integrity, and structural risk factors at every visit.
What to Expect at Your First Visit
Tell your story
We’ll review your symptoms, medical history, and any relevant conditions like diabetes or prior injuries.
X-rays if needed
Many foot and ankle concerns can be imaged the same day, without a separate imaging center visit.
A specific answer
Rather than a general impression, you’ll get a specific diagnosis based on exam findings and imaging.
Conservative first
Most plans start with non-surgical care; surgery, when appropriate, is discussed as part of a clear next-step plan.
Red Flags That Need Same-Week Care
Most foot and ankle issues can wait for a scheduled appointment, but a few signs mean it’s worth being seen sooner rather than later:
A wound on the foot that isn’t healing or is getting worse · redness, warmth, or swelling spreading from a cut or ingrown nail · sudden inability to bear weight · numbness or color change in the toes · any foot symptom in a patient with diabetes or known poor circulation.
How to Choose a Podiatrist
Board Certification
Look for board certification (such as ABPM), which reflects additional training and ongoing requirements beyond basic licensure.
Scope of Services
Practices offering both conservative and surgical care can manage a problem through its full course, rather than referring out partway.
Location & Access
A practice with multiple nearby offices — like San Jose, Los Gatos, and Mountain View — makes ongoing care more practical.
Insurance Fit
Confirm whether your plan requires a referral and whether the practice accepts your specific plan, including Medicare if applicable.
Our Office Locations
The Foot and Ankle Medical Group sees patients at three convenient South Bay and Peninsula locations. Call the office nearest you to schedule a visit.
Frequently Asked Questions
For minor, short-term issues like a small blister or mild ankle sprain, your PCP is a reasonable first stop. For anything involving the structure of the foot, recurring pain, diabetes, nail or skin problems, or symptoms lasting more than a couple of weeks, a podiatrist has more specialized training and in-office tools to diagnose and treat the problem directly.
It depends on your insurance plan. Many PPO plans allow patients to see a podiatrist directly without a referral, while some HMO plans require one from a primary care doctor first. Checking with your insurance plan is the most reliable way to confirm.
Diabetes can reduce sensation and blood flow to the feet, which means small problems like cuts or calluses can go unnoticed and progress to serious infections or ulcers. Routine podiatric exams catch these issues early, and Medicare and most insurance plans cover this care for at-risk patients.
Podiatrists are trained in the foot, ankle, and related lower-leg structures, so ankle sprains, instability, and many tendon problems fall well within their scope.
When in doubt, scheduling directly with a podiatrist is a safe choice for anything foot or ankle related — and if it turns out to be something better handled elsewhere, we can help point you in the right direction.
Often, yes, if your symptoms warrant it. Many podiatry offices, including ours, have in-office X-ray capability, so imaging can typically happen the same day rather than requiring a separate appointment.
Medicare covers many podiatric services, particularly for diabetic foot care and medically necessary treatment. Coverage specifics depend on your plan and the service involved.
The Foot and Ankle Medical Group sees patients throughout the South Bay and Peninsula, including San Jose, Los Gatos, Mountain View, and Monterey. You can schedule directly without needing to see your PCP first in most cases.
Looking for a Podiatrist Near San Jose, Los Gatos, or Mountain View?
If you’re dealing with a foot or ankle problem and aren’t sure who to see, a focused podiatric exam will give you a clear answer — and a clear next step.
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