Congenital clubfoot is the most common clinical deformity of the pediatric foot, characterized by inversion of the anterior part of the foot, inversion of the heel bone, plantarflexion, and contracture of the Achilles tendon in the form of a horseshoe deformity. The incidence of congenital clubfoot is 1 to 4.5 per 1,000 newborns, and the ratio of male to female is 2:1. Unilateral is more common than bilateral. There are many causes of congenital clubfoot, which are still inconclusive in the world and may be related to genetics, environment, fetal position in the womb and other factors. How is congenital clubfoot treated? Depending on the age of the patient, there are conservative treatment before six months and surgical treatment after six months. The best and most advanced international treatment is the early treatment (Ponseti method). This means that the child is given manipulation and a cast by a pediatric orthopedic surgeon as early as five days after birth. The cast is changed once a week, and depending on the correction of the deformity, the cast is fixed 5 to 10 times to gradually correct the inversion, pronation and partial horseshoe deformity of the foot. Finally, it is enough to give a brace fixation. What if I miss the early treatment period? There are different treatment methods for children of different ages: for example, late plaster orthopedics, soft tissue release after 6 months, complete release of the subtalar joint; tendon orthopedics and diarthrosis fixation at older ages; triarthrosis fixation after 10 years of age, etc. Through these procedures, the deformity can also be corrected, but the surgery is traumatic, in the long run, early and early treatment does not destroy the normal structure of the child’s foot, and the damage is small so the effect is better.