Xtep 2000km 5 Pro for Wide Feet: The Chinese Trainer to Try First?

If you have wide feet and want to try one Chinese running shoe, the Xtep 2000km 5 Pro is one of the first models I would look at.

Not because it is guaranteed wide. It is not a formal 2E or 4E shoe. But compared with many narrow, race-inspired Chinese performance shoes, the 2000km 5 Pro has the right kind of signals: daily-trainer role, practical geometry, and multiple fit reports pointing to useful toe room and vertical space.

The short version: Xtep 2000km 5 Pro is probably the most sensible first Chinese-brand experiment for medium-to-slightly-wide feet. True 4E runners should still be cautious.

Quick answer

Why Xtep 2000km matters for wide feet

Most Chinese performance shoes get discussed because they are fast, cheap, or foam-forward. That is useful, but wide-foot runners need a different first question:

Does the shoe have enough room to run in for an hour without pressure?

The Xtep 2000km 5 Pro is interesting because it appears to answer that question better than many shoes in the category. Fit reports commonly mention practical toe room, good lockdown, and a daily-trainer feel rather than a pure race-shoe squeeze.

That makes it more relevant to WideFit readers than some flashier carbon shoes.

Fit profile

Fit areaWhat to expect
Toe boxMore promising than many Chinese performance shoes, but not 2E/4E
MidfootShould feel secure; do not size up so much that lockdown disappears
InstepBetter if you are medium-volume; high instep still needs caution
HeelNeeds enough lockdown to balance any extra front room
Best foot typeMedium-to-slightly-wide, not true extra-wide

Xtep 2000km vs Li-Ning Red Hare

Choose Xtep 2000km 5 Pro if fit confidence matters most.

Choose Li-Ning Red Hare 9 Ultra if you want the more exciting hype shoe and your foot usually fits normal-width trainers.

Red Hare is the shoe people talk about. Xtep is the shoe I would rather test first if width is the problem.

Xtep 2000km vs Li-Ning Yueying

Choose Xtep if you want the Chinese-brand option with stronger room signals.

Choose Yueying if you specifically want Li-Ning and a cushioned daily trainer.

Both are still single-width experiments. Neither replaces a real 2E/4E shoe for runners who know they need that much volume.

How to size it

Use this process:

  1. Measure both feet in centimeters.
  2. Use the longer foot.
  3. Match CM/EU sizing on the retailer chart.
  4. Read whether that retailer uses updated or old Xtep size conversion.
  5. Avoid sizing up more than half a size unless returns are easy.

This matters because Chinese-brand US conversions can be inconsistent. CM sizing is less glamorous, but it saves money.

Who should try it?

Try the Xtep 2000km 5 Pro if:

Who should skip it?

Skip it if:

If that sounds like you, start with New Balance wide running shoes or ASICS wide running shoes instead.

Bottom line

The Xtep 2000km 5 Pro is not a magic wide shoe. But among Chinese running shoes, it is one of the more promising places to start.

For WideFit readers, I would put it ahead of most Chinese race shoes and slightly ahead of the current Li-Ning hype models if the main goal is fit confidence. Buy carefully, size by centimeters, and keep expectations realistic.


Comparing the category? See the best Chinese super trainers for wide feet and the Chinese running shoes for wide feet guide.