| Length | Longer than one rope length |
| Structure | Sequential pitches + belay stations |
| Extra skills | Anchors, rope management, descent |
| Difficulty | Advanced |
Multi-pitch climbing is climbing a route longer than a single rope length, broken into sequential pitches the team ascends one at a time. At the top of each pitch the leader builds an anchor and belays the second up, then they swap gear and continue. It adds anchor-building, rope management, and commitment on top of the climbing itself.
How it works
The leader climbs a pitch, builds an anchor, and belays the second up; they reorganise and repeat to the top.
Getting down
Either walk off or rappel the route in stages — managing the descent is a critical, accident-prone skill.
The skills
Confident leading, anchors, rope management, and self-rescue. It’s the gateway to alpine climbing.
Frequently asked questions
What is multi-pitch climbing?
It's climbing a route too long for one rope length by splitting it into pitches. The leader climbs a pitch, builds an anchor, and belays the second up to that stance; then they reorganise gear and climb the next pitch. The process repeats to the top, often hundreds of metres up.
How do you get down from a multi-pitch route?
Either by walking off the top via a descent trail, or by rappelling the route in stages from anchor to anchor. Planning and managing the descent — including rope retrieval and finding the rappel stations — is a core part of multi-pitch climbing and a common place for accidents.
What skills do you need for multi-pitch climbing?
Solid lead climbing and belaying, confident anchor building, efficient rope and gear management at hanging or cramped belays, rappelling, and basic self-rescue. Because you're committed high off the ground, judgment and efficiency matter as much as climbing hard.
Sources
- Multi-pitch systems — American Alpine Club
- Instruction standards — AMGA