What Is a Col?

A col is the lowest point on a ridge between two peaks — a mountain pass or saddle. Cols are natural crossing points and route waypoints in mountaineering, often marking the gateway between two valleys or the start of a summit ridge. The term is especially common in alpine climbing.

MountaineeringTerrainBeginner
A col is the lowest point on a ridge between two peaks — a mountain pass or saddle. Cols are natural crossing points and route waypoints in mountaineering, often marking the gateway between two valleys or the start of a summit ridge. The term is especially common in alpine climbing.
What it isLow point on a ridge between peaks
Also calledPass, saddle, gap, notch
RoleCrossing point, route waypoint
DifficultyBeginner

From the French col, meaning 'neck' (of the mountain).

A col is the lowest point on a ridge between two peaks — a mountain pass or saddle. Cols are natural crossing points and route waypoints in mountaineering, often marking the gateway between two valleys or the start of a summit ridge. The term is especially common in alpine climbing.

It comes from the French col, ‘neck’.

Col, saddle, or pass

In hiking the same feature is often called a saddle; ‘pass’ stresses a crossing route. All sit low on a ridge between two summits.

Why it matters

Cols are the natural places to cross a ridge, so they anchor route descriptions and often begin summit ridges.

Frequently asked questions

What is a col?

A col is the lowest point on a ridge between two summits — effectively a mountain pass. Cols are key features in mountaineering, serving as crossing points between valleys, route junctions, and often the spot where a summit ridge begins.

What's the difference between a col, a saddle, and a pass?

They largely overlap. 'Col' (from French for 'neck') and 'saddle' both describe the low point between two peaks, with 'col' more common in alpine and European usage. 'Pass' emphasizes a route used to cross a range. In practice the terms are interchangeable.

Why are cols important in mountaineering?

Because they're the lowest, most logical places to cross a ridge, cols become natural waypoints on a route — gateways between valleys, junctions on a traverse, and the base of summit ridges. Many classic routes are described relative to their cols.

Sources