Jug vs Crimp

Jugs and crimps are opposite ends of the hold spectrum. A jug is a big, positive hold you can wrap your whole hand around — secure and beginner-friendly; a crimp is a tiny edge that fits only fingertips, demanding finger strength and carrying injury risk. Most routes mix the two.

Aspect Jug Crimp
Size Large, deep Small edge
Grip Whole hand wraps around Bent fingertips
Security Very secure, restful Insecure, powerful
Demands Little strength Finger strength
Injury risk Low High (finger pulleys)

You'll grab a jug when…

  • The hold is big and positive
  • You need a rest
  • You're on a beginner route

You'll crimp when…

  • The hold is a small edge
  • You're on thin face climbing
  • You have strong fingers

Verdict

Jugs are the friendly holds beginners love; crimps are the small edges that define hard face climbing. Climbing all grades means meeting both — and protecting your fingers when crimping.

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between a jug and a crimp?

A jug is a large, deep hold you can wrap your whole hand around, so it's secure and restful; a crimp is a tiny edge that fits only fingertips and demands finger strength. They sit at opposite ends of the hold-difficulty spectrum.

What does 'juggy' mean?

A 'juggy' route or section is covered in big, easy jug holds, so it feels secure and is lower in difficulty for its steepness. Steep, juggy climbing is strenuous but reassuring, which makes it popular.

Are crimps bad for your fingers?

Crimping concentrates load on the finger tendons and pulleys, so over-gripping, full crimping, or ramping up too fast can cause injury. Warming up and building crimp strength gradually keeps it manageable.

Related: Jug · Crimp · Sloper · Climbing holds