When to Resole Cowboy Boots — And When to Walk Away

Your boots are worn through. A resole costs $100–$180. New boots cost $300+.

Here's the math — and the stuff a cobbler can fix that you didn't know about.

A good pair of western boots costs real money. When the sole wears through, the temptation is to toss them and buy new. But if the boot was built right — Goodyear welted, full-grain leather, quality construction — a resole gives you essentially a new boot on a broken-in upper that already fits your foot perfectly.

That broken-in fit is worth something. The leather insole has molded to your arches, your heel cups, your pressure points.

A new boot takes weeks to get there. A resoled boot is comfortable from day one.

The Simple Rule

If the boot originally cost more than twice the resole price, resole it. A $300 boot with a $130 resole? Resole. A $150 boot with a $130 resole? Replace. A $600 Lucchese with a $150 resole? Resole it every time — you'd spend four times that on a replacement.

This rule works for 90% of cases. The other 10% depends on the condition of the upper, which we'll get to.

What Resoling Costs in Canada

Service Price Range (CAD) What's Included
Rubber half-sole (topy) $40–$60 Thin rubber layer bonded to existing sole. Adds grip and extends sole life. Quick job — usually same day or next day.
Full leather resole $80–$150 Old sole removed, new leather sole and heel attached, welt restitched if needed. 1–3 weeks turnaround.
Full rubber resole $100–$180 Old sole removed, new rubber outsole attached. More complex than leather. 2–4 weeks turnaround.
Heel replacement only $30–$50 Worn heel cap replaced. Most common repair — heels wear faster than soles. Usually same day.
Full rebuild $200–$350 New sole, new welt, new insole, heel counter reinforcement. Only worth it on premium boots ($500+).

Prices vary by city and cobbler. Toronto and Vancouver tend toward the higher end.

Smaller cities and prairie towns are often cheaper. Call ahead — not every cobbler works on western boots regularly.

Can Your Boot Be Resoled?

Not all boots can be resoled. The construction method determines whether a resole is even possible.

✅ Goodyear Welt — Yes, resole freely If your boot has a visible welt (the strip of leather between the upper and sole with stitching through it), it can be resoled. The welt acts as a sacrificial connection — the cobbler removes the old sole from the welt and attaches a new one. Most boots over $200 CAD from brands like Ariat, Boulet, Justin, Lucchese, and Canada West use Goodyear welting.
🚩 Cemented (Glued) — No, or very limited If the sole is glued directly to the upper with no visible welt, resoling is either impossible or will cost more than the boot is worth. Budget boots under $150 (Durango, Laredo, Cody James) are almost always cemented. When the sole fails, the boot is done.
✅ Blake Stitch — Yes, but find a specialist Less common in western boots but used by some makers. The sole is stitched directly to the insole through the bottom. Resole-able, but requires a Blake stitching machine that not every cobbler has.

Not sure what your boot has? Flip it over. If you see stitching running around the perimeter where the sole meets the upper, it's welted or Blake-stitched.

If there's no visible stitching, it's cemented. Our quality guide has more detail on identifying construction methods.

Signs You Need a Resole

Resole now:

You've got time:

When a Boot Is Beyond Saving

A cobbler can fix a lot, but not everything. Here's when replacement makes more sense than repair:

🚩 Cracked or split upper leather If the shaft or vamp leather is cracked through (not just creased — actually split), the structural integrity is gone. A cobbler can patch small areas, but widespread cracking means the leather has dried out beyond recovery. No amount of conditioning or resoling helps a dead upper.
🚩 Destroyed insole If the leather insole is rotted, crumbling, or has worn through completely, a simple resole won't fix the comfort issue. A full rebuild (new insole + new sole) costs $200–$350 and is only worth it on boots that cost $500+. On a $250 boot, that's replacement territory.
🚩 Welt damage The welt is the sacrificial strip that connects everything. If the welt is cut, torn, or degraded, the cobbler needs to rewelt the boot before resoling — that's a major repair that adds $50–$100 to the bill. On a cheap boot, not worth it. On a premium boot, it's still cheaper than buying new.
🚩 The fit is wrong If you've always hated how these boots fit, resoling them keeps a boot you don't enjoy wearing. Use the resole money toward a new pair in the right size. Our fit guide and size converter can help you get the next pair right.

What Else a Cobbler Can Fix

Most people think of cobblers for resoling only. A good cobbler can handle far more than that:

Repair Cost (CAD) Notes
Heel cap replacement $30–$50 The most common repair. Takes 15 minutes. Do this before the heel wears past the cap into the leather.
Rubber half-sole $40–$60 Adds rubber traction to leather soles. Great for Canadian winters.
Stitching repair $20–$40 Broken shaft stitching, pulled seams, loose welt stitching.
Pull tab/strap repair $25–$50 Torn or loose pull tabs reattached or replaced.
Toe cap $30–$50 Metal or rubber toe cap added to prevent toe wear. Popular on work boots.
Shaft shortening $40–$80 Cut down the shaft height. Can't make them taller, but shortening is straightforward.
Conditioning + polish $20–$40 Professional deep clean, condition, and polish. Makes old boots look new. Also doable at home — see our care guide.
Stretching $20–$35 Minor width stretching (up to a half size wider). Length can't be stretched.

Finding a Good Cobbler in Canada

Not all shoe repair shops handle western boots well. Cowboy boots have specific construction (the angled heel, the shank, the welt style) that a cobbler who mostly works on dress shoes might not be familiar with.

Ask before dropping off your boots:

In Western Canada, boot repair shops are common — especially around Calgary, Edmonton, and smaller Alberta towns where western boots are everyday footwear. In Toronto, Vancouver, and Montreal, you'll need to look harder. Google "boot repair" or "shoe repair cowboy boots" plus your city.

Some western boot retailers also offer repair services or can recommend cobblers. Lammle's and Alberta Boot Company in Calgary are good starting points if you're in the area.

Mail-In Resoling

If you can't find a local cobbler who handles western boots, mail-in resoling services exist across Canada and the US. You ship your boots, they resole and ship back.

Expect to pay the resoling cost plus $20–$40 in shipping each way. Turnaround is 3–6 weeks including transit time. It's not ideal — you're without your boots for over a month — but it's better than throwing out a $400 pair because your local shoe repair guy doesn't know western construction.

The Resoling Decision Flowchart

  1. Is the boot Goodyear welted? If no → don't resole, replace when sole fails.
  2. Is the upper in good shape? If the leather is cracked through or the lining is destroyed → replace.
  3. Did the boot cost more than 2x the resole price? If yes → resole. If no → it's a judgment call.
  4. Do you like how the boot fits? If yes → resole and enjoy boots that already fit your feet. If no → use the money toward a better-fitting pair.
  5. Is the boot worth the wait? If you need boots next week and the resole takes three weeks → buy a new pair and resole the old ones later for a backup pair.
The boot community consensus: Any welted boot over $300 is worth resoling at least once. Premium boots ($500+) from Lucchese, Anderson Bean, or Rios of Mercedes are worth resoling three or four times — the uppers last decades if you care for them properly. The best boot you'll ever own is a ten-year-old pair that fits like it grew on your feet.