| Means | Long gap between protection |
| Implies | A long potential fall |
| Affects | Route seriousness, not just grade |
| Difficulty | Intermediate concept |
A runout describes a long stretch of climbing between pieces of protection, where a fall would be long because the last bolt or piece of gear is far below. ‘Runout’ routes are bold and committing, demanding confidence that you won’t fall, and a route’s runout sections contribute to its seriousness beyond its technical grade.
Why it matters
A runout raises the stakes of a slip — the longer fall relates directly to fall factor and what lies below.
How it’s flagged
Sparse bolts or gear, sometimes by design; seriousness is captured by grades like the British E-grade and US R/X ratings while leading.
Frequently asked questions
What does runout mean in climbing?
It means there's a long distance between your last piece of protection and where you are climbing, so a fall would be long. A 'runout' route or section forces the climber to commit, because protection is sparse and the consequences of falling are higher.
Are runout routes dangerous?
More so than well-protected ones, since a fall covers more distance and may risk hitting ledges or the ground. The danger depends on what's below — a runout above clean, steep rock is far safer than one above a ledge. Runout climbing demands a low chance of falling.
Why are some routes runout?
Sometimes the rock simply offers no cracks for gear or few sensible bolt placements; sometimes routes were deliberately bolted sparsely to preserve a bold, traditional character. Guidebooks and grades (like the British E-grade or American R/X ratings) flag serious runouts.
Sources
- Risk and route grades — American Alpine Club