Gout can make the foot or ankle suddenly painful, swollen, red, and extremely tender. It often affects the big toe, but it can also involve the ankle and other joints, which is why it can be mistaken for an injury, infection, or arthritis flare.
What a gout flare can feel like
Gout pain often comes on quickly and may feel out of proportion to what happened. Some patients wake up with intense joint pain even though they do not remember injuring the foot or ankle. The joint may feel hot, swollen, stiff, and sensitive to light pressure.
- Sudden severe pain in the big toe, foot, or ankle
- Redness, warmth, swelling, and tenderness
- Pain that is worst in the first several hours
- Lingering soreness after the sharpest pain improves
Why it should be evaluated
Gout is not the only condition that can cause a hot, swollen, painful joint. Infection, fracture, arthritis, tendon problems, and soft-tissue injury can overlap in how they look. A careful exam helps avoid treating the wrong problem.
When it is more urgent
Sudden intense joint pain should be checked, especially if the area is hot and inflamed. Fever, spreading redness, open skin, drainage, diabetes, or immune-system concerns make it more important not to wait.
How TSB Podiatry helps
Dr. Boehm evaluates whether the pain pattern fits gout or whether another foot or ankle issue needs attention. The goal is to control the current problem and help patients understand what may be contributing to repeated flares.

