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April 17, 2026

Leg length discrepancy: causes, consequences and treatment

How to understand a difference in leg length and when it is worth consulting

Have you ever been told that one leg seems shorter than the other? Do you notice that when standing, you put more weight on one side, that one hip sits higher than the other, or that the hem of your trousers never falls exactly the same on both sides? This perception is very common and, in most cases, it is not serious.

However, understanding why it happens can help you prevent discomfort and better understand how your body adapts. A leg length discrepancy does not always mean that a bone is shorter. Sometimes, what changes is not the real length of the leg, but the way the pelvis, spine or muscles organize posture.

In this article, we explain what leg length discrepancy is, what its causes are, what consequences it may have and how it can be approached from a global perspective.

Evaluación postural de una diferencia de longitud entre las piernas

What is leg length discrepancy?

Leg length discrepancy, also called anisomelia, refers to a difference in length between one leg and the other. It is a very common situation. In fact, small differences are present in a large part of the population and, in most cases, go completely unnoticed.

Many of these differences are minimal and do not cause any problem. The body has an enormous capacity for adaptation and can compensate for small asymmetries without pain or functional limitation. For this reason, detecting a difference does not automatically mean that there is a pathology.

At Aliantis, we understand leg length discrepancy as information that can be useful within a global assessment, but not as an alarming finding in itself. What matters is not only knowing whether a difference exists, but understanding whether it is real or apparent, how the body adapts to it and whether it is generating symptoms.

What can cause a difference in leg length?

Leg length discrepancy can have different origins, and distinguishing between them is essential to guide treatment properly. In practice, the difference between a structural discrepancy and a functional discrepancy completely changes the way it should be interpreted.

Structural or anatomical discrepancies

Structural discrepancies are due to a real difference in the length of the bones of one leg compared with the other, usually the femur, the tibia or both. In this case, there is a true anatomical asymmetry that can be measured objectively.

Congenital, developmental or acquired origin

This difference may be present from birth, appear during growth or develop later due to acquired causes. These may include congenital alterations, consequences of fractures, infections, orthopedic surgeries or interventions such as hip or knee prostheses.

When they usually matter

In many cases, even a structural difference is well tolerated. Only when it is more marked, or when the body cannot compensate for it comfortably, can symptoms or overloads appear that justify intervention.

Functional or postural discrepancies

Functional discrepancy, also called apparent or virtual discrepancy, is not due to a real bone length difference. In this case, both legs have the same anatomical length, but the body’s posture creates the impression that one is shorter.

When the leg is not shorter, but appears to be

This happens when the pelvis tilts, rotates or organizes itself asymmetrically, making one leg “appear” shorter during clinical observation. The bone has not changed size, but the body’s position has.

What factors can cause it?

This type of discrepancy is very common and may be related to muscle tension, mobility restrictions in the pelvis or spine, differences in foot support, postural changes or even more distant factors, such as neck tension, jaw problems or adaptations of the visual and proprioceptive systems.

In these cases, the origin is not anatomical but functional. This means that treatment is not about compensating for a bone difference, but about understanding what is organizing that posture and how to help the body recover better harmony.

A third possibility: adaptation to the environment

Some authors describe an additional form of apparent inequality related to adaptation to the terrain. This can occur, for example, in runners or walkers who repeat routes with a constant lateral slope for a long time.

The role of terrain and repeated habits

When the body repeatedly adapts to a slope or uneven support, it can develop a postural organization that mimics a leg length discrepancy. In these cases, we are dealing more with an acquired adaptation to the environment than with a true difference in length.

Why is it so important to distinguish between them?

A bone discrepancy is not the same as a postural discrepancy. This difference is key, because an appropriate treatment in one case may be inappropriate in the other.

Not every “short leg” needs mechanical correction

If one leg appears shorter due to a functional adaptation, placing a heel lift or insole without an appropriate assessment can accentuate the imbalance and generate new tensions. That is why it is not advisable to automatically correct something that has not yet been understood.

The value of a global assessment

A well-conducted assessment makes it possible to determine whether the difference is structural or functional, and to decide whether the most appropriate approach is to observe, work on mobility, re-educate posture or, in some specific cases, consider mechanical compensation.

How is a leg length discrepancy diagnosed?

The diagnosis of a leg length discrepancy should not be based only on visual impression. Observing that one hip appears higher or that one leg “looks” different is not enough to determine its origin.

What is assessed during the clinical examination?

The assessment begins with postural observation in standing, an examination of the pelvis, spine and mobility of the involved joints, as well as gait pattern and foot support. The presence of asymmetrical muscle tension or signs of compensation is also analyzed.

Observation of the pelvis and gait

The position of the iliac crests, the way the pelvis moves during walking and the distribution of load between both sides provide a great deal of information about how the body adapts.

Direct measurement and its limits

Measurement with a tape measure between anatomical landmarks can be used as a guide, but it has clear limitations. Posture, tension and the difficulty of locating certain anatomical points can alter the result. For this reason, it should never be interpreted in isolation.

When may imaging tests be necessary?

When there is suspicion of a relevant structural difference, imaging tests can help objectify the length of the bone segments and refine the diagnosis.

X-rays and more precise studies

Conventional X-rays can provide a reference, although they do not always clearly distinguish between a real bone difference and other mechanical alterations. In more complex cases, specific studies such as full-length standing X-rays or more precise analysis systems may be used.

What do they really provide?

The important thing is not to request imaging systematically, but to use it when the clinical context justifies it. In many people, a good functional assessment is enough to guide treatment without the need for complementary studies.

What consequences can a leg length discrepancy have?

The consequences depend on many factors: the magnitude of the difference, how long it has been present, the body’s capacity for adaptation and each person’s individual context.

In many situations, a small discrepancy has no clinical consequence. But when compensations accumulate or become overloaded over time, musculoskeletal symptoms may appear.

Low back pain and pelvic tension

Low back pain is one of the most frequently associated complaints. When the pelvis works asymmetrically for a long time, the lumbar and pelvic muscles may end up bearing sustained tension that promotes pain or stiffness.

Overload in the hip, knee or foot

Discomfort may also appear in the hip, knee or foot, especially if the body begins to distribute loads unevenly on each side. Sometimes it is not a specific injury, but a repeated feeling of fatigue or tension always on the same side.

Spinal adaptations and postural balance

The spine may reorganize itself to keep the head and gaze centered, which can sometimes result in a functional scoliosis or global postural compensations. The body always seeks to maintain balance, even if it does not do so in the most economical way over the long term.

When do symptoms appear?

There is no single threshold from which discomfort appears. In some people, small differences generate symptoms; in others, larger differences go unnoticed for years.

Magnitude matters, but it does not explain everything

The length difference can influence symptoms, but it is not the only factor. Stiffness, physical condition, daily activity, injury history and the body’s ability to adapt without overloading also matter.

The age of the adaptation also counts

Sometimes the problem is not the difference itself, but how long the body has been compensating for it. The more chronic this adaptation is, the greater the likelihood of stiffness, overload or pain.

How is a leg length discrepancy treated?

Treatment depends on the type of discrepancy and the impact it has on the person’s life. Not all discrepancies require intervention, and not all should be approached in the same way.

When the discrepancy is structural

If the difference is real but small and there are no symptoms, it often does not need to be treated. The body may tolerate it perfectly.

When it may not require anything

In mild and well-compensated differences, observation and reassessment may be sufficient. Not every finding requires correction.

When heel lifts or insoles may be considered

When there is a more marked anatomical difference and associated symptoms, mechanical compensation with heel lifts, insoles or footwear adjustments may be considered. This should always be done after a clear diagnosis, not as an automatic response.

Exceptional cases

In large differences or in very specific situations, other orthopedic or surgical options may be considered. But this is not the usual scenario.

When the discrepancy is functional

When bone length is the same and the problem lies in the way the body organizes itself, the work focuses on recovering mobility, functional symmetry and adaptability.

The role of osteopathy, physiotherapy and movement

In these cases, osteopathy, physiotherapy and therapeutic exercise can help release restrictions, improve postural control, reduce tension and restore a more balanced organization to the body.

Why mechanical correction may not be the answer

If the discrepancy is apparent, compensating for it as if it were structural can worsen the postural pattern and add a new load where it was not needed. For this reason, before placing a heel lift, it is important to clearly understand what is being corrected.

The role of osteopathy in managing leg length discrepancy

Osteopathy provides a global perspective that can be especially useful when there are complex adaptations, chained tensions or symptoms that cannot be explained solely by a difference in length.

Seeing the body as a system

An alteration in foot support, the pelvis, spinal mobility or even more distant regions can influence the way the body distributes its loads. Osteopathy does not only seek to “see where it hurts”, but to understand how the whole system is organized.

What it can offer in a functional discrepancy

In a functional discrepancy, osteopathic work can help restore mobility, reduce tension and support better alignment without the need for external compensations. In many cases, when the body regains movement options, the apparent difference decreases or disappears.

What it can offer in a structural discrepancy

When the difference is anatomical, osteopathy does not change bone length, but it can help work on the secondary compensations that this asymmetry generates in the pelvis, spine or lower limbs. In these cases, it can complement other strategies and improve global comfort.

When it is worth consulting

Not every discrepancy needs treatment. However, it may be useful to consult when recurrent symptoms appear or when the body begins to show signs of overload.

Signs that should not be ignored

It may be a good idea to consult if you notice repeated low back pain, hip or knee discomfort without a clear cause, a feeling of uneven support, overload always on the same side, or body fatigue that repeats when walking, running or standing for a long time.

At Aliantis, we support you in Sitges

At Aliantis, we approach leg length discrepancy from a global, cautious and personalized perspective. We do not aim to “correct an asymmetry” at all costs, but to understand how your body is organizing itself, what it is compensating for and what it needs to move with more balance and less strain.

Through osteopathy, physiotherapy and a complete functional assessment, we help you distinguish whether there is a structural difference or a postural adaptation, and decide which approach is most appropriate for you.

Because the goal is not for the body to be perfectly symmetrical, but for it to find a stable, efficient and pain-free balance.

This blog article does not aim to generate new knowledge; it is based on the reading of scientific publications, blog articles and other texts.

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