That rough patch on your sole might not be a callus. And treating it like one could make things worse. Let’s clarify the key differences—without fear-mongering—so you can care for your feet wisely.
🔍 The Core Difference: Friction vs. Virus
|
Feature
|
Callus
|
Plantar Wart
|
|---|---|---|
|
Cause
|
Friction/pressure (shoes, standing)
|
HPV virus (types 1, 2, 4, 27, 57) entering through tiny skin breaks
|
|
Contagious?
|
❌ No
|
✅ Yes—but requires direct contact + skin breach (not highly contagious)
|
|
Location
|
Pressure points (heel, ball of foot)
|
Anywhere on sole—often where virus entered
|
|
Texture
|
Uniformly thickened, yellowish
|
Rough, cauliflower-like; may have tiny black dots
|
|
Skin lines
|
Natural foot ridges continue through callus
|
Ridges disrupted or pushed aside by wart
|
|
Pain pattern
|
Hurts when pressed directly (standing)
|
Hurts when pinched from sides (lateral pressure)
|
💡 Key visual clue: Those “black dots” in warts aren’t seeds—they’re clotted capillaries (tiny blood vessels). Calluses have no dots.
⚠️ Why Misidentifying Matters
Treating a wart like a callus can backfire:
- ❌ Filing/shaving removes surface skin but doesn’t kill the virus—may spread it to surrounding skin
- ❌ Moisturizing heavily creates a damp environment where HPV thrives